American Museum of Natural History

Amphibian Species of the World 5.6, an Online Reference

  • ASW home
  • herpetology site

Anaxyrus Tschudi, 1845

Class: Amphibia > Order: Anura > Family: Bufonidae > Genus: Anaxyrus

[link to this account]

Anaxyrus Tschudi, 1845, Arch. Naturgesch., 11: 170. Type species: Anaxyrus melancholicus Tschudi, 1845, by monotypy.

Dromoplectrus Camerano, 1879, Atti Accad. Sci. Torino, Cl. Sci. Fis. Mat. Nat., 14: 882. Type species: Bufo anomalus Günther, 1859 "1858", monotypy. Synonymy with Bufo (sensu lato) by Boulenger, 1882, Cat. Batr. Sal. Coll. Brit. Mus., Ed. 2: 282.

English Names

North American Toads (Frost, McDiarmid, and Mendelson, 2008, in Crother (ed.), Herpetol. Circ., 37: 2; Liner and Casas-Andreu, 2008, Herpetol. Circ., 38: 7; Frost, McDiarmid, Mendelson, and Green, 2012, in Crother (ed.), Herpetol. Circ., 39: 11).

Distribution

Alaska and southern Canada south to the highlands of Mexico west of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

Comment

Removed from the synonymy of Bufo by Frost, Grant, Faivovich, Bain, Haas, Haddad, de Sá, Channing, Wilkinson, Donnellan, Raxworthy, Campbell, Blotto, Moler, Drewes, Nussbaum, Lynch, Green, and Wheeler, 2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297: 363, where it had been placed by Peters, 1873, Monatsber. Preuss. Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1873: 624; Boulenger, 1882, Cat. Batr. Sal. Coll. Brit. Mus., Ed. 2: 281; Pramuk and Mendelson, 2003, Southwest. Nat., 48: 676. The literature of Anaxyrus is deeply intertwined with that of "Bufo" (sensu lato) and most references to "Bufo" in North America refer either to Anaxyrus or to Incilius. Literature and work to 1972 on Bufo (sensu lato, including Anaxyrus) were summarized in Blair (ed.), 1972, Evol. Genus Bufo. Savage, 1954, Texas J. Sci., 6: 83-112, and Zweifel, 1970, Am. Mus. Novit., 2407: 1-10, discussed the former Bufo debilis group. Ferguson and Lowe, 1969, Am. Midl. Nat., 81: 435-466, discussed the Bufo punctatus group (including the Bufo debilis group). Tihen, 1962, Am. Midl. Nat., 62: 157-183, discussed osteological variation and species groups. Green, 1996, Israel J. Zool., 42: 95-109, discussed the systematics of hybridizing members of the former Bufo americanus group (Bufo hemiophrys, Bufo baxteri, Bufo fowleri, Bufo americanus). Graybeal, 1997, Zool. J. Linn. Soc., 119: 297-338, discussed phylogeny in the group (as part of Bufo, sensu lato), as did Pauly, Hillis, and Cannatella, 2004, Evolution, 58: 2517-2535. Maxson, Song, and Lopata, 1981, Biochem. Syst. Ecol., 9: 347-350, discussed the immunological relationships of North American "Bufo". Smith and Chiszar, 2006, Herpetol. Conserv. Biol., 1: 6-8, implied that this taxon should be considered a subgenus of Bufo; see comment under Bufonidae. Van Bocxlaer, Biju, Loader, and Bossuyt, 2009, BMC Evol. Biol., 9 (e131): 1-10, provided molecular evidence that Anaxyrus is the sister taxon of Incilius and together distant from Rhinella, as did Van Bocxlaer, Loader, Roelants, Biju, Menegon, and Bossuyt, 2010, Science, 327: 679-682 (but see comment under Incilius). Pauly, Hillis, and Cannatella, 2009, Herpetologica, 65: 115-128, on the basis of a largely undisclosed analysis (and in ignorance of the Van Bocxlaer et al., 2009, paper) considered Anaxyrus, Incilius, and Rhinella as subgenera within a redelimited Bufo to form a single genus, Bufo. This was rejected as without a sufficient evidential basis by Frost, McDiarmid, and Mendelson, 2009, Herpetologica, 65: 136-153, compared with other analyses based on substantially more evidence. Fontenot, Makowsky, and Chippindale, 2011, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 59: 66-80, reported on broad-scale hybridization within the eastern members of the Anaxyrus americanus group. Pyron and Wiens, 2011, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 61: 543-583, in their study of Genbank sequences, confirmed the monophyly of this taxon (although this is obscured by their explicit adoption of an out-dated and non-monophyletic taxonomy), its placement as the sister taxon of Incilius, and provided a tree of exemplar species. Powell, Collins, and Hooper, 2011, Key Herpetofauna U.S. & Canada, 2nd Ed.: 39-42, provided a key to the species of North America north of Mexico.

Contained taxa

  • Anaxyrus americanus (Holbrook, 1836)
  • Anaxyrus baxteri (Porter, 1968)
  • Anaxyrus boreas (Baird and Girard, 1852)
  • Anaxyrus californicus (Camp, 1915)
  • Anaxyrus canorus (Camp, 1916)
  • Anaxyrus cognatus (Say, 1822)
  • Anaxyrus compactilis (Wiegmann, 1833)
  • Anaxyrus debilis (Girard, 1854)
  • Anaxyrus exsul (Myers, 1942)
  • Anaxyrus fowleri (Hinckley, 1882)
  • Anaxyrus hemiophrys (Cope, 1886)
  • Anaxyrus houstonensis (Sanders, 1953)
  • Anaxyrus kelloggi (Taylor, 1938)
  • Anaxyrus mexicanus (Brocchi, 1879)
  • Anaxyrus microscaphus (Cope, 1867)
  • Anaxyrus nelsoni (Stejneger, 1893)
  • Anaxyrus punctatus (Baird and Girard, 1852)
  • Anaxyrus quercicus (Holbrook, 1840)
  • Anaxyrus retiformis (Sanders and Smith, 1951)
  • Anaxyrus speciosus (Girard, 1854)
  • Anaxyrus terrestris (Bonnaterre, 1789)
  • Anaxyrus woodhousii (Girard, 1854)

External Links

Please note: these links will take you to external websites not affiliated with the American Museum of Natural History. We are not responsible for their content.

  • For additional sources of information from other sites search Google
  • For images search Arkive, CalPhoto Images and Google Images
  • To search the NIH genetic sequence database, see GenBank
  • How to cite
  • How to use
  • Higher taxonomy and progress
  • Structure of records
  • History of the project
  • Contributors, 1985 edition
  • Contributors, online edition
  • Versions
  • Museum abbreviations
  • Useful links
  • Copyright and terms of use

Copyright © 1998-2013, Darrel Frost and The American Museum of Natural History. All Rights Reserved.

Send inquiries to Darrel Frost <frost at amnh org>.