Adult Western Toads migrate to communal breeding sites in early spring' (BC Ministry of Environment 2009), and congregate in small ponds and pools (Matsuda et al. 2006). They are reported to return to the same breeding sites each year (Matsuda et al. 2006). Females lay eggs in long strings (several metres long) that are wrapped around vegetation. A female can produce up to 12,000 eggs in a single clutch, and these hatch in seven to ten days, developing into toadlets in six to ten weeks (Matsuda et al. 2006). As they transform, they gather along the edges of breeding ponds. Tiny toadlets emerge on mass, usually in early July, and disperse overland. At this stage, they are so small that they are easily trampled and are also easy prey. Later in the summer they are easily recognizable by their bright yellow foot tubercles.
| Western Toads eat a variety of insects and invertebrates. Over 95 percent of their adult diet consists of flying insects, ants, beetles, sowbugs, crayfish, spiders, centipedes, slugs, and earthworms, while tadpoles feed on aquatic plants and algae (BC Ministry of Environment 2009).
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