A review of the biology and literature of the Gulf Coast Toad (Incilius nebulifer), native to Mexico and the United States
Author
Mendelson Iii, Joseph R.
Author
Kinsey, Se. T.
Author
Murphy, Es. B.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3974
4
517
537
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3974.4.4
d674b470-4336-427f-89ac-aeb5bdf4cff4
1175-5326
238380
3CCF51FE-33A7-4960-A526-7A1A54939EB3
Incilius nebulifer
(
Girard, 1854
)
Gulf Coast Toad
Bufo granulosus
Baird & Girard, 1852
:173
. [Not of
Spix, 1824
]. Type-locality “between Indianola and San Antonio, Texas” [restricted to “Indianola, Calhoun County, Texas” by
Schmidt, 1953
:66
.].
Holotype
(fide
Kellogg, 1932
),
United States
National Museum (USNM) 2595, age and sex unknown, collected by J. H. Clark in 1851, under the direction of survey leader J. D. Graham (not examined by authors)
Fouquette & Dubois (2014)
rejected the restriction of the
type
locality, claiming lack of published evidence.
Bufo nebulifer
Girard,1854
:86
, preoccupied by
Bufo granulosus
Spix, 1824
Bufo nebulifera
Baird, 1859a
:44
.
Chilophryne nebulifera
Cope,1862:358
.
Incilius nebulifer
Cope, 1863
:50
.
Bufo valliceps
Peters, 1863
:81
.
Bufo nebulifer
Mendelson & Mulcahy, 2000
:182
Cranopsis nebulifer
Frost, Grant, Faivovich, Bain, Haas, Haddad
, de
Sá, Channing, Wilkinson, Donnellan, Raxworthy, Campbell, Blotto, Moler, Drewes, Lynch, Green & Wheeler, 2006
:364
.
Ollotis nebulifer
Frost, Grant & Mendelson, 2006
:558
.
Incilius nebulifer
Frost, Mendelson & Pramuk, 2009
:418
–419.
Bufo (Incilius) nebulifer
Fouquette & Dubois, 2014
:315
.
Nomenclatural history.
This species was originally described as
Bufo granulosus
by
Baird & Girard (1852)
Girard (1854)
provided the replacement name
Bufo nebulifer
,
as the original name was preoccupied by
Bufo granulosus
Spix, 1824
.
Peters (1863)
placed
B. nebulifer
in the synonymy of Mesoamerican species
Bufo valliceps
Wiegman, 1833
, where it remained until
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
showed that the two species were distinct.
Frost
et al.
(2006a)
suggested multiple taxonomic changes among New World bufonids, and referred the taxon
nebulifer
into
Cranopsis
Cope, 1875
, which was shown by
Frost
et al.
(2006b)
to be preoccupied, so the taxon was referred to
Ollotis
Cope, 1875
.
Ollotis
was found also to be unavailable, so
nebulifer
was finally referred to
Incilius
Cope, 1863
, by
Frost
et al.
(2009)
. Various English-language common names have been applied to this species, including Gulf Coast Toad, Coastal Plain Toad, Mexican Toad, Common Toad, and Nebulous Toad.
Crother (2012)
suggested the name Gulf Coast Toad, which is adopted here.
Liner & Casas-Andreu (2008)
suggested the standard Spanish name as
Sapo nebuloso
, but were consistent with
Crother (2012)
in suggesting the standard English name as Gulf Coast Toad.
Definition.
Incilius nebulifer
is a large toad, with adult females up to
125 mm
and males to
98 mm
SVL. The head is broad, with a complete complement of low, robust cranial crests. The snout is pointed in dorsal view, and rounded in profile. The tympanum is large (about 50% diameter of the eye). In males, the bilateral vocal slits are large and the
m. interhyoideus
forms a large, bilobed (anteroposteriorly), pigmented vocal sac that may be visible through the overlying gular skin. The skin is uniformly rough, with many evenly distributed sharply pointed tubercles. On the flanks a conspicuous lateral descending row of enlarged sharply pointed tubercles is evident. The ventral surfaces are granular, with unpointed tubercles. Ventral surfaces are usually uniform cream in color while dorsal surfaces are variable. In most individuals the dorsal pattern clearly shows a dark brown dorsal and dorsolateral background coloration, with a broad cream or yellow mid-dorsal stripe and paired dorsolateral stripes (usually ventral to the lateral row of tubercles) of a similar pale color. Variable pale brown or cream markings may be present, scattered across all dorsal surfaces. The tips of the digits are the same color as the remainder of the digit. The hands have short, robust fingers and lack webbing. The feet are long, with slender toes, being about halfwebbed.
The larvae are small (attaining
20–25 mm
total length) and appear, without magnification, to be nearly uniformly dark gray dorsally, with a series of conspicuous pale spots extending down the dorsal ridge of the tail. The caudal fins are tall and transparent, with some scattered melanophores and iridiophores. The ventrolateral surfaces and the ventral half of the caudal musculature are dark gray with densely distributed silvery iridiophores. The oral disc and the marginal papillae are small and the tooth row formula is 2(2)/3; the A-2 gap is broad, being about one third the length of the A-2 row. The beak is small and shallowly notched.
Advertisement call has a mean frequency of
1479–1785
and a mean pulse of 33.14–38.17 (corrected to 25o C;
Porter 1964a
).
Diagnosis.
A large species of
Incilius
(males to
98 mm
SVL, females to
125 mm
SVL) with the full complement of cranial crests (canthal, supraorbital, supratympanic, postorbital, parietal, preorbital, pretympanic, and suborbital), none of which are hypertrophied to any considerable degree. The tympanum is large (about 50% diameter of the eye), and usually in contact with the pretympanic crest. The skin is rough, with many evenly distributed sharply pointed tubercles over all dorsal surfaces, and with a distinct lateral descending row of enlarged sharply pointed tubercles on the flanks. Tibial glands are absent. The vocal slits are large and bilateral. The parotoid glands are distinctly triangular or subtriangular in shape. The color pattern is remarkably invariable, with most individuals having dark brown dorsal and dorsolateral background coloration, with a broad cream or yellow mid-dorsal stripe and paired dorsolateral stripes (usually ventral to the lateral row of tubercles) of a similar pale color. No individuals show a distinctive “dead leaf” color pattern dorsally. The tips of the digits are of a similar color to the rest of the digit.
FIGURE 1.
A reprint of an engraving of
Incilius nebulifer
(original labelled as
Bufo nebulifer
) From Baird, S. F., 1859. Reptiles of the boundary. With notes by the naturalists of the Survey. Imprint: [Washington: s.n., 1859]. plate XL (40) called
Bufo nebulifer
, Grd.
Figs. 1–4.
FIGURE 2
.
Incilius nebulifer
,
in life. An adult male photographed in the wild in Harris County, Texas, USA, by Matthijs Hollanders.
FIGURE 3.
Incilius nebulifer
,
in life. A larval tadpole; image reproduced from Altig
et al.
(1998).
Incilus nebulifer
is similar in appearance to
I. valliceps
from which it most easily is distinguished by having the dorsal coloration described above (
Fig. 2
), which is virtually absent in the otherwise polymorphic
I. valliceps
.
The two species are parapatric about a geographic line crossing the Gulf Versant of Veracruz,
Mexico
, near the town of Palma Sola (
Mulcahy
et al.
2006
). The tadpoles of
I. nebulifer
(
Fig. 3
) and
I. valliceps
are essentially indistinguishable, fitting the characters presented in the keys presented by
Altig (1970)
,
Altig
et al.
(1998)
, and Mendelson
et al.
(1999)—all presented under the taxon
Bufo valliceps
.
Hybridization between these two species has not been documented.
Descriptions.
The original description, as
Bufo granulosus
by
Baird & Girard (1852)
provided perfunctory details focusing on the cranial crests and coloration. The subsequent taxonomic note (
Girard 1854
), replacing the preoccupied name
granulosus
with
Bufo nebulifer
,
provided no additional morphological descriptions. Baird (1859) also presented a brief description.
Cope (1889, as
B. valliceps
)
provided a description that is consistent with that of
I. nebulifer
(rather than
I. valliceps
) and indeed it appears to be based mostly on material that is geographically referable to
I. nebulifer
; references to specimens therein that geographically are referable to
I. valliceps
are limited to the “Varieties” section of the account. Kellogg’s (1932, as
B. valliceps
) description is a composite representing specimens referable to both
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
.
Descriptions referable to
I. nebulifer
may be found in the following publications:
Wright & Wright (1938
;
1949
; both as
B. valliceps
);
Blair
et al.
(1957
, as
B. valliceps
),
Conant (1958
;
1975
; both as
B. valliceps
);
Dickerson (1969, as
B. valliceps
)
, Cochran & Goin (1979),
Smith (1978, as
B. valliceps
)
;
Behler & King (1979, as
B. valliceps
)
;
Garrett & Barker (1987, as
B. valliceps
)
;
Branson (1995, as
B. valliceps
)
,
Dundee
et al.
(1989
, as
B. valliceps
);
Conant & Collins (1998, as
B. valliceps
)
;
Trauth
et al.
(2004
,
as
B. nebulifer
),
Lemos-Espinal & Smith (2007, as
B. nebulifer
)
,
Dorcas & Gibbons (2008, as
B. nebulifer
)
;
Elliott, Gerhardt, &
Davidson (2009
, as
B. nebulifer
/
Ollotis nebulifer
),
Oliver-López
et al.
(2009
, as
Ollotis nebulifer
),
Tipton
et al.
(2012)
, and
Lemos-Epinal & Dixon (2013)
. Descriptions of metamorphic and juvenile individuals were provided by
Greuter (2004)
. Descriptions of the tadpole (as
B. valliceps
) were presented by
Wright (1929)
and, in the form of dichotomous keys, were presented by
Altig (1970)
,
Altig
et al.
(1998)
, and
Dodd (2013)
;
Limbaugh & Volpe (1957)
and
Gosner (1960)
described the tadpole through early development. Chromosomal information was presented by
Cole
et al.
(1968)
,
Bachman (1970)
, and
Beck & Mahan (1979)
.
Illustrations.
Illustrations appear in all of the references cited in “Descriptions” above except that of
Baird & Girard (1852)
. The illustration in
Cope (1889)
is referable to
I. nebulifer
.
Others published illustrations include
Cochran (1961, as
B. valliceps
)
,
Clark (1971, as
B. valliceps
)
,
Blair (1972, as
B. valliceps
)
,
Mattison (2007
, as
B. nebulifer
and Waddle (2011, as
I. nebulifer
). Illustrations of several osteological elements, based on un-vouchered specimens(s) from San Luis Potosi,
Mexico
, were presented by
Holman (2003)
. The drawing presented by
Powell
et al.
(1998
:fig. 58; as
B. valliceps
) is intended to refer to populations in
USA
(i.e.,
I. nebulifer
) but in fact represents the Neotropical species
I. campbelli
;
Lemos-Espinal & Dixon (2013:fig. 6)
reprinted the same image to represent
I. nebulifer
.
Fossil Record.
Holman (2003)
reviewed published accounts of fossils referred to
B.
cf.
valliceps
and
B. valliceps
from Scurry County and Culberson County, Texas,
USA
, respectively. Both records are presumed to be referable to
I. nebulifer
, though both are extralimital with respect to the modern range of the species. The Scurry County record is from the Pliocene, and the Culberson County record is from the Pleistocene.
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
posited a Miocene–Pliocene vicariant speciation event separating
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
along the Caribbean Coast of modern-day Veracruz,
Mexico
, with subsequent Pleistocene dispersal of
I. nebulifer
northward into modern-day
USA
. This hypothesis is not entirely consistent with the fossil records from western Texas,
USA
.
Holman (2003)
in his review of North American anuran fossils states definitively the only fossil record of
I. valliceps
(= presumably
I. nebulifer
) is from Fowlkes Cave, Culberson County, Texas; thus he casts doubt on the validity of the Pliocene record from Scurry County, Texas.
Remarks.
The town of Indianola, referenced in the
type
locality, no longer is recognized after being decimated by a series of hurricanes in the 1800s. It was located near the mouth of Matagorda Bay on the Gulf Coast of Calhoun County, Texas,
USA
, at approximately
N 28o 30’
,
W 96 o 29’
. Despite the initial taxonomic misstep by
Baird & Girard (1852)
and the recent taxonomic changes of generic names for the clade of Mesoamerican bufonids (
Frost
et al.
2006a
;
2006b
;
2009
), the species was referred consistently to as
B. valliceps
in all literature and taxonomic checklists (e.g.,
Gorham 1974
) from the time of
Cope (1863)
until
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
Consequently, the literature on this species is relatively simple to search and interpret, so long as the reader can determine the provenance of the material being discussed (i.e.,
USA
and northern
Mexico
vs. southern
Mexico
and Central
America
) With this distinction in mind, the majority of the literature relating to ecology, behavior, and physiology that was published under the name
Incilius
(=
Bufo
)
valliceps
actually pertains to
I. nebulifer
.
Note that
Trauth
et al.
(2004)
incorrectly listed Mulcahy & Mendelson as the authority for the taxon
nebulifer
when, in fact, it is Girard.
Etymology.
The name
nebulifer
is derived from
nebula,
meaning “cloud” and “fer” meaning “bearing” and is in reference to the generally clouded color pattern of this species. The etymology provided by
Dodd (2013)
, for the taxon
nebulifer
,
is incorrect.
Distribution.
We present a map of locality records in Fig. 4. Consideration of the distribution of
I. nebulifer
suggests that it is limited at its southern extent by the seemingly minimal eastern tail of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Axis (Mulcay
et al.
2006), whereas it appears to be capitalizing upon human habitat disturbance and actively expanding its distribution eastward in the
United States
(
Vogel and Pechman 2010
;
Milko 2012
). Presumably, the northern distributional limit is delimited by winter temperatures, although the species does occur in areas known to experience hard freezes. Similarly, it appears that the western distributional limits are contained by the cooler conditions on the uplift of the Sierra Madre Oriental in
Mexico
. In
USA
and extreme northern
Mexico
, the distributional pattern appears to follow permanent drainages in the Chihuahuan Desert, suggesting that aridity plays a factor in delimiting the range in this area. However, none of these hypotheses regarding physiological effects of low temperatures and dryness as factors limiting the distribution have been explicitly tested.
MAP.
The distribution of
Incilius nebulifer
.
Dots indicate locality records. The approximate location of the
type
locality is indicated with a star. Question mark indicates a valid specimen record that likely does not represent a natural, nor established, population (see text).
Distributional notes were presented by
Hallowell (1856)
, Baird (1859),
Garman
(1887)
,
Cope (1888)
,
Strecker (1902)
,
Stone (1903)
,
Gadow (1905)
,
Strecker (1908a
,
b
;
1909
;
1926a
–d), Sanders (1909),
Strecker (1926a
–
c
),
Strecker & Williams (1927)
,
Strecker (1928)
,
Burt & Burt (1929)
,
Strecker (1930)
,
Burt (1935)
,
Strecker & Johnson (1935)
,
Schmidt & Owens (1944)
,
Smith & Buechner (1947)
, Smith (1948),
Blair (1950)
,
Brown (1950)
,
Milstead
et al.
(1950)
,
Peterson (1950)
,
Reese & Firschein (1950)
,
Anderson
et al.
(1952)
,
Smith & Sanders (1952)
,
Raun (1959)
,
Milstead (1960)
,
Webb & Packer (1961)
,
Lewis (1974)
,
Conant (1977)
,
Carl (1980)
, Rackowitz
et al.
(1983),
Thornton & Smith (1993)
,
Blair
et al.
(1995)
,
McAllister & Ward (1986)
,
Fleet & Aubrey (1997)
,
Ramírez-Bautista (1999)
,
Dixon (2000)
,
Dayton et al. (2001)
,
Johnson (2002)
,
Gifford & Fontenot (2003)
,
Hibbitts
et al.
(2008)
,
Price (2009)
,
Lazcano
et al.
(2012)
,
Dixon & Hibbitts (2013)
,
Farr
et al.
(2013)
, and
Maxwell (2013)
.
Although this species is listed in most literature and field guides (e.g.,
Conant & Collins 1998
;
Dorcas & Gibbons 2008
) as occurring in the state of Arkansas,
USA
,
Trauth
et al.
(2004)
reported that the occurrence in that state is based on but a single record (first reported by
Smith & Langebartel (1949)
near Calion, Union County, Arkansas; no additional records have been found. While
Trauth
et al.
(2004)
continued to list the species as part of the fauna of Arkansas, it seems unlikely that a viable population ever existed within the boundaries of Arkansas; that record is indicated on the map herein, but is not considered as part of the natural range of the species. A geographically proximal record, from Morehouse Parish, Louisiana,
USA
, is based on a specimen in the University of Louisiana at Monroe (ULM 16976) and does appear to be properly identified (J. L. Carr, pers. comm.); we have no information to discredit the validity of its locality data. However, we agree with J. Boundy (pers. comm.) that the natural northern boundary of
I. nebulifer
in Louisiana appears to lie in the lower Red River Valley, in Rapides Parish. The locality mapped by
Dundee
et al.
(1989)
for Richland Parish is not based on an extant voucher specimen (J. Boundy, pers. comm.); so, we do not include that record here. Given the proximity of Caddo Parish, in northwestern Louisiana, to known records in adjacent counties in northeastern Texas gives us a somewhat objective reason to predict the presence of the species in northeastern Texas, despite the apparent lack of records. Specimens mapped from Jones County, Mississippi,
USA
(Mendelson,
in
Lannoo 2005) are based on specimens at the University of Southern Mississippi that have highly suspect locality data (R. L. Jones, pers. comm.); based on this information, we discount records from that county.
In the western extreme of its distribution, in the Chihuahuan Desert,
I. nebulifer
appears to be restricted to the primary watercourses draining into either basins or into the Rio Grande that forms the
US
–Mexican border. In
Mexico
,
Lemos-Espinal
et al.
(2004)
do not list this species, under any taxonomic name from the State of Chihuahua; based on records of species in drainages into the Rio Grande in Texas,
USA
, we suspect this species will be found in similar drainages in Chihuahua,
Mexico
. Espino de
Castillo
et al.
(2009)
mention a toad they refer to
Incilius valliceps
from Los Riscos cave, in the State of Querétaro, but with no mention of voucher specimens; we do not include this record on the map presented here.
Biology of The Gulf Coast Toad.
The catalogue account for
Bufo valliceps
(
Porter, 1970
)
, as well as Porter’s (1962; 1964a–c) overall concept of the species, is a composite of
I. nebulifer
,
I. valliceps
,
and additional species of
Incilius
(
Mendelson 1998
)
; however, those records and literature cited that pertain to specimens from the currently known range of
I. nebulifer
are valid for this latter species.
Morphology.
Morphological descriptions and analyses of morphological data were presented by Bauldauf (1958),
McAlister (1961)
, W. Martin (1967; 1971), R.
Martin (1972a
,
b
),
Martin & Gans (1972)
,
Gans (1973)
,
Emerson (1982)
,
Hutchinson & Savitzky (2004)
R. Martin (1972b)
. The analyses of sternal morphology and inguinal fat body organs by da
Silva & Mendelson (1999)
included specimens referable both to
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
,
however no differences in these structures are evident between the two species (
Mendelson
et al.
2011
). The osteological review provided by
Martin (1973)
is problematic because it was based on specimens referable to
I. nebulifer
, but also included a skeletal specimen identified as
Bufo valliceps
(the specimen in
Martin 1973
:fig. 2D is TNHC 41994; T. LaDuc,
in lett.
); this specimen bears the locality data “
Mexico
: Sinaloa” which is greatly extralimital for the either
I. nebulifer
or
I. valliceps
.
Blair (1962
;
1970
) discussed the importance of various
types
of data to inform understanding of this species, with respect to other bufonids. Cytological comparisons with other bufonid species were presented by
Sanders & Cross (1964)
. A morphologically anomalous specimen was described by
Freed (1992)
and larval deformities by
Drake
et al.
(2007)
. Effects of long-term preservation on specimens were reported by
Deichmann
et al.
(2009)
.
Reproduction, development, and hybridization.
Various aspects of the reproductive biology, including the advertisement calls, of
I. nebulifer
have been documented by
A. P. Blair (1947)
,
Wright & Wright (1949)
,
Duran (1954)
,
Martin (1958)
, W. F.
Blair (1956a
;
1960a
),
Thornton (1960)
,
Awbrey (1963)
,
Porter (1964a)
,
Hubbs & Martin (1967)
,
Grubb (1970
,
1973a
), W. Martin (1972),
Wiest (1982)
,
Sullivan & Wagner (1988)
,
Dundee
et al.
(1989)
,
Ryan & Sullivan (1989)
,
Branson (1995)
,
Wagner & Sullivan (1992
;
1995
),
Foley (1994)
,
Greuter (2004)
, Lannoo
et al.
(2005),
Salinas (2009)
,
Jones & Ratnam (2009)
,
Pierce & Hall (2012)
, and
Oyervides & Zaidan (2013)
. Development, metamorphosis, and ontogeny and factors affecting them have been documented by
Taylor (1942)
,
Wright & Wright (1949)
, Volpe (1957),
Limbaugh (1956)
,
Limbaugh & Volpe (1957)
,
Conant (1958
,
1975
);
Blair (1953
;
1956b
;
1960a
;
1963
),
Turner (1960
,
1962
),
Hubbs
et al.
(1963)
,
Ballinger & McKinney (1966)
,
Yew (1966
;
1969
),
Licht (1967)
,
Grubb (1973b)
,
Dundee
et al.
(1989)
,
Pierce & Montgomery (1989)
,
Nelson (1993)
,
Rosenberg (1990)
,
Rosenberg & Pierce (1995)
, and
Conant & Collins (1998)
. Various aspects of hybridization with other anurans have been discussed by
Blair (1941)
,
Orton (1951)
,
Liner (1954)
,
Thornton (1954
,
1955
),
A. P. Blair (1941)
, W. G.
Blair (1956b
;
1958
;
1959
;
1960a
;
1961b
;
1963
;
1964
;
1966
;
1972
),
Moore (1955)
,
Volpe (1956
;
1959
;
1960
),
Gosner & Black (1958)
,
Fox
et al.
(1961)
,
Kennedy (1962)
,
Brown (1971a
,
b
),
Guttman (1972)
,
Brown & Brownell (1971)
, Brownell (1971),
Sanders (1978
;
1985
;
1986
),
Hillis
et al.
(1984)
,
Dundee
et al.
(1989)
,
Greuter (2004)
,
Brown & Mesrobian (2005)
,
Mulcahy
et al.
(2006)
, and
Mendelson
et al.
(2011)
. This older literature regarding hybridization must be interpreted in the context of the taxonomic separation of
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
by
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
, and also in the context of the re-analyses of data from the laboratory of W. F. Blair presented by (2008) and subsequently re-analyzed by
Brandvain
et al
. (2014)
. Additional, recent, studies of hybridization were presented by
Vogel (2007)
and
Vogel & Johnson (2008)
.
Habitat use.
Habitat use by the adults has been discussed by
Pope (1919)
,
Wright & Wright (1949)
,
Thornton (1960)
,
Awbrey (1963)
,
Brattstrom (1963)
,
Wilks (1963)
,
Grubb (1968
,
1970
),
Neill & Grubb (1971)
,
Grubb (1976)
,
Moore (1976)
,
Whiting
et al.
(1987)
,
Dundee
et al.
(1989)
,
McAllister
et al.
(1989)
,
Foley (1994)
,
Reid & Whiting (1994)
,
Irwin (1997)
,
Mendelson (1998)
,
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
,
Means (2005)
,
Mulcahy
et al.
(2006)
,
Lemos-Espinal & Smith (2007)
,
Vogel & Johnson (2008)
,
Salinas (2009)
,
Oliver-López et al (2009)
,
Gehlbach (2010)
,
Walls
et al.
(2011)
,
Hernández-Salinas
et al.
(2012)
, and
Milko (2012)
. Associations with caves has been reported by
Mohr (1948)
,
McAlister (1954)
,
Baker
(1957)
,
Redell & Knox (1962)
,
Redell & Finch (1963)
, and
Reddell (1970)
. Specific associations with saltwater were documented by
Viosca (1926)
,
Allen (1932)
,
Burger
et al.
(1949)
, reviewed by
Neill (1958)
,
Mueller (1985)
,
Alexander
et al.
(2012)
and
Hua & Pierce (2013)
. Responses to fire were reported by
Brown
et al.
(2011
;
2014
). Potential effects of exposure to introduced plant species were reported by Cotton (2009) and
Cotten
et al.
(2013)
.
Community ecology.
Feeding ecology has been documented by
Strecker (1927a)
,
Campbell & Davis (1968)
,
Clark (1969)
, and McGehee
et al.
(2001). Predators and possible antipredator mechanisms have been documented by
Strecker (1927b)
,
Wright & Wright (1949)
,
Licht (1968)
,
Neill (1968a
,
b
),
Grubb (1972)
,
Clark (1974)
,
Brown (1974)
,
Platt & Fontenot (1993)
,
Tucker (1994)
,
Adams (2005)
, and
Mendelson (2005)
. Palatability of the tadpoles was tested by
Adams
et al.
(2011)
. Parasites have been reported by
Walton (1929)
,
Harwood (1930)
,
Hoffpauir & Morrison (1966)
,
McAllister
et al.
(1989)
,
McAllister & Donn (1990)
, and
Martin & Dresser (1991)
. Pathogens were reported by
Gaertner et al (2010)
, and
Saenz
et al.
(2010)
. Interspecific associations with other anurans have been discussed by
Glass (1946)
,
Wright & Wright (1949)
,
Axtell (1958)
,
Blair (1961a)
,
James (1966)
,
Moore (1976)
,
Gambs & Littlejohn (1979)
, Foley (2005),
Mitchell & Lannoo (2005a
,
b
),
Schwalbe & Goldberg (2005)
,
Franklin & Killpack (2005)
, Sredl (2005),
Sredl & Field (2005)
,
Sullivan (2005)
,
Wallace (2005)
,
Vogel & Pechmann (2010)
, and
Preston
et al.
(2014)
. Associations with other species caught in traps with this species were reported by
Blair (1960b)
. Population trends were discussed by
Boundy (2005)
.
Camper & Dixon (1988)
evaluated a microchip marking technology in the species. Road and industrial mortality was reported by
Flickinger (1981)
and
Ray
et al.
(2006)
; road mortality and scavenging by
Thamnophis proximus
was reported by
Watson (2007)
.
Physiology and behavior.
Various aspects of the physiological parameters and responses in this species have been presented by
Morgan & Stokes (1936)
,
Svedberg & Hedenius (1934)
,
Sanders (1962)
,
Wittliff (1964)
,
Campbell & Davis (1971)
,
Guttman (1974)
,
Withers (1978)
,
Prasad
et al.
(1984)
,
Wygoda (1989)
,
Williams (1992)
,
Williams & Wygoda (1993)
,
Verma & Pierce (1994)
,
Moore (1997)
, and
Rowson
et al.
(2001)
. Veterinary protocols were presented by
Brannelly
et al.
(2012)
and
Brannelly (2014)
and notes on captive care were provided by
Walsh
et al.
(1992)
. Phototactic responses were presented by
Jaeger & Hailman (1973)
and
Hailman & Jaeger (1974)
; however, the source for the specimens used by
Jaeger & Hailman (1973, presented as
B. valliceps
)
is not reported, so referral of data as relevant to
I. nebulifer
is speculative. Interspecific effects of injections of pituitary extracts were presented by
Quinn & Mengden (1984)
. Hemoglobins and transferrins were described by
Fox
et al.
(1961)
. Resistance to cardiotoxins was reported by
Moore
et al.
(2009)
The parotoid secretions were analyzed by
Porter (1964c)
, but results are based on specimens referable both to
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
.
Serological comparisons were made by
Durio (1960)
and biochemical components in the skin were analyzed by
Cei
et al.
(1968)
. Use of this species for human pregnancy testing was evaluated by
Aguirre-Pequeno (1950)
. Effects of potentially toxic chemicals were evaluated by
Chen & Chen (1933)
, and
Shaw & Grushkin (1957)
. Effects of radiation were reported by
Blair (1960c)
and
Clayton (1960)
.
Clark (1971)
reported on use of branding as a means of marking individuals.
Greding (1971)
reported on learning in this species.
Evolution.
The phylogenetic literature, with respect to
I. nebulifer
, can be difficult to interpret if the authors did not state the provenance of the samples used in their analyses. For example,
Baldauf (1959)
implies that the individuals used in his morphological analyses were collected in the
USA
(and possibly may be the same individuals reported by
Baldauf, 1958
), but one cannot be certain.
Maxson (1984)
and
Maxson
et al.
(1981)
included
“
Bufo valliceps
”
in their studies from Texas, so they can be assigned with certainty to
I. nebulifer
.
All phylogenetic treatments of the taxon “
valliceps
”
published prior to 2000 were based, variously, on specimens or samples representing either
I. valliceps
(sensu stricto) or
I. nebulifer
.
The modern reader of those papers is encouraged to check the geographic source of the material included in any particular analysis and assign the appropriate taxonomic name. Because of the well-supported sister-taxon relationship between
I. nebulifer
and
I. valliceps
(
Mulcahy & Mendelson 2000
;
Mulcahy
et al.
2006
;
Mendelson
et al.
2011
), the taxonomic differences typically have virtually no bearing on the overall evolutionary discussions presented by those authors. The exception, however, is the result presented by Van Bocxclaer
et al.
(2010), wherein they reported that the species pair
valliceps
+
nebulifer
) was rendered paraphyletic by a sample identified as “
I. macrocristata
”
(=
I. macrocristatus
).
Mendelson
et al.
(2011)
reviewed all of the relevant material, presented a clarification of the issue and determined that Van Boxclaer
et al.
(2010) had included a misidentified specimen in their analyses (i.e., their sample of “
I. macrocristata
”
actually represented
I. valliceps
). In their broad analysis of amphibian relationships,
Pyron & Wiens (2011)
chose to compile various published genetic sequences (i.e., GenBank) to create chimera to represent the taxa
“
Bufo valliceps
” and “
Bufo nebulifer
”
for their analyses; their compilation of sequences from various sources into singular OTUs included the misidentified material from
Van Bocxlaer
et al.
(2010)
, with the result that Pyron & Wiens presented
“
valliceps
”
and “
nebulifer
”
not to be sister taxa. Because their analyses include clearly misidentified material, this section of their overall phylogenetic tree is inadmissible. Thus, the sister relationship between
I. valliceps
+
I. nebulifer
remains is supported by all modern phylogenetic analyses that are based on accurately identified material. Phylogenetic relationships, biogeographic history, and evolutionary natural history of
I. nebulifer
were presented and discussed by
Mulcahy & Mendelson (2000)
,
Mulcahy
et al.
(2006)
, and
Mendelson
et al.
(2011)
. The relative phylogenetic diversity of
I. nebulifer
,
with respect to other North American bufonids, in terms of conservation prioritization was presented and discussed by
Goebel (2005)
.
Conservation and education.
Summary of possible conservation threats to this species were presented by
Hammerson & Canseco-Márquez (2004)
,
Mendelson (2005)
,
Frías-Alvarez
et al.
(2010)
. Use of habitat by this species following mining activities was reported by
Walton (2012)
. Use of these common toads in conservationawareness education programs was described by
Rommel (2012)
.