
Related Terms: animal, frog, toad, amphibian, reptile, turtle, snake, lizard, salamander, crocodile, bullfrog, hibernation
Amphibians and reptiles, though not everyone's favourite creatures, are important contributors to the good health of the environment and your garden. Both play crucial roles in the ecosystem, and the health of their populations is a good indicator of the health of the environment.
Amphibians and reptiles are important to your garden for the role they play in keeping pest populations under control. The majority of reptiles and amphibians are carnivorous, preying on rodents or insects, though some, such as turtles, also eat vegetable matter.
Amphibians and reptiles are important in controlling populations of slugs, rodents, and insects. Garter snakes are one of the major predators on slugs. One toad can eat well over 1,000 earwigs in a summer.
What are amphibians and reptiles? | Cold-blooded threats | A wet ‘n' wild welcome
What are amphibians and reptiles?
Amphibians and reptiles are cold-blooded. This means that unlike humans, who produce heat internally, amphibians and reptiles derive heat from outside their body. To control their body temperature they must move to a cooler or warmer location. If they wanted to warm up, they might move to a stone or log in the sun, which is why you often see turtles basking on logs. To cool down on a very hot day, they would move to a shady location, which is why you can find salamanders hiding under logs, where it is cool and damp.
You can tell the difference between amphibians and reptiles by their skin and the presence or absence of claws. Reptiles, such as snakes, turtles, lizards and crocodiles, have scaly skin and their toes have claws on them. Amphibians, on the other hand, have moist, glandular skin and their toes lack claws. Salamanders, toads, and frogs are all amphibians.
To distinguish a toad from a frog you need to check their skin and how they live. Frogs have smooth skin and live in water or in wet places. Toads have tough, lumpy skin and live mainly on land.
Cold-blooded threats
Amphibians and reptiles are disappearing from many areas where they were once abundant due to threats, such as pollution, an increase in ultraviolet (UV) levels from thinning of the ozone layer, introduced species, the pet trade, and habitat loss.
Amphibians are particularly sensitive to chemical pollutants for several reasons. Because of their permeable skin, which they use to help them breathe, amphibians are vulnerable to pollutants in the water. Their skin acts like a sponge, soaking up all the pollutants. Handling amphibians with sunscreen, insect repellent, or other chemicals on your hands can also be hazardous to their health.
The eggs of certain amphibians, due to their lack of protective shells, are also affected by increases in UV levels. This may help explain why amphibians are disappearing even in some remote areas.
Introduced species can cause havoc to native reptile and amphibian populations. When certain game and bait fish are added to previously fishless lakes and wetlands, they can have devastating effects, as can the introduction of bullfrogs to previously unpopulated areas. Introduced species affect native species directly, through predation (the introduced species eats them up), and also indirectly, by competing for limited food or altering the habitat.
The collection of reptiles and amphibians for the pet trade, if carried out irresponsibly, can have ruinous effects on native populations already stressed by other threats.
The major threat to amphibians and reptiles, however, is habitat loss. With rapidly expanding urbanization, their habitat is quickly disappearing. More than 80 percent of Canada's urban wetlands have been destroyed. Although the focus of recovery efforts tends to be on restoring large wetlands, by creating amphibian- and reptile-friendly habitat in your backyard, including small ponds and temporary wetlands important to many amphibians, you can help to alleviate this problem.
A wet ‘n’ wild welcome
To attract amphibians and reptiles to your backyard consider the following tips: