BATRACHIAN VENOMS
Product ID L3108
Name Bufo sahytiensis 
Common Name(s) Cane toad
Origin South America
Purity >99%
Form Lyophilized powder
Packaging In vacuum sealed glass vials, in secured parcel.
 Packaging and Prices

Packaging Price (€) Quantité Buy Now
10 mg 120.00

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50 mg 510.00

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100 mg 900.00

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For quotation of big quantities, please Contact us
 Species Protection Status
CITES None
EU None 
France None 
 Product Technical Documents
Safety Data Sheet Available on request, please Contact us
Ref. SDS_L3108 : unit price : free of charge
 Related Links
See also The UNEP-WCNC species Database (http://www.unep-wcmc.org)
ITIS : Integrated Taxonomic Information System (http://www.itis.gov)
The Reptile-Database.org (http://www.reptile-database.org)
Search Rhinella marina with
Search Rhinella marina with PubMed
Bibliography 1. Brown, G. P., Shine, R., Ward-Fear, G. (2010). ''Using a native predator (the meat ant, Iridomyrmex reburrus) to reduce the abundance of an invasive species (the cane toad, Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia.'' Journal of Applied Ecology, 47, 273-280.
2. Bruning, B., Phillips, B.L., Shine, R. (2010). ''Turgid female toads give males the slip: a new mechanism of female mate choice in the Anura.'' The Royal Society- Biology Letters
3. Crossland, M. R. (2000). ''Direct and indirect effects of the introduced toad Bufo marinus on populations of native anuran larvae in Australia.'' Ecography, 23(3), 283-290.
4. Drewes R. C., Roth B. (1981). ''Snail-eating frogs from the Ethiopian highlands: a new anuran specialization.'' Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 73, 267-287.
5. Easteal, S. (1963). ''Bufo marinus.'' Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 395.1-395.4.
6. Ingram, G. J., Covacevich J. (1990). ''Tropidonophis mairii vs. Bufo marinus. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum.'' , 29(396).
7. Lampo, M. and De Leo, G. A. (1998). ''The invasion ecology of the toad Bufo marinus: from South America to Australia.'' Ecological Applications, 8(2), 388-396.
8. Llewelyn J., Phillips B. L., Shine R. (2009). ''Sublethal costs associated with the consumption of toxic prey by snakes.'' Austral Ecology, 34, 179-184.
9. Llewelyn, J., Schwarzkopf L., Alford R., Shine R. (2009). ''Something different for dinner? Responses of a native Australian predator (the keelback snake) to an invasive prey species (the cane toad).'' Biological Invasions
10. Maeda, N. and Matsui, M. (1990). Frogs and Toads of Japan, 2nd edition. Bun-Ichi Sogo Shuppan Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan.
11. Phillips, B.L., Brown, G.P., Shine, R. (2010). ''Evolutionarily accelerated invasions, the rate of dispersal evolves upwards during the range advance of cane toads.'' Journal of Evolutionary Biology
12. Seebacher, F. and Alford, R. A. (1999). ''Movement and microhabitat use of a terrestrial amphibian (Bufo marinus) on a tropical island: seasonal variation and environmental correlates.'' Journal of Herpetology, 33(2), 208-214.
13. Shine, R. (2006). ''The Ecological Impact of Invasive Cane Toads (Bufo marinus) in Australia'' Quarterly Review of Biology: in press.
Taxonomic Classification
  • Class : Amphibia
  • Order : Anura
  • Suborder : -
  • Family : Bufonidae
  • Subfamily : 
  • Genus :  Rhinella

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