“There have been no records of any toads at the preserve since the original springs ran dry sometime around 1962,” the local destination said
Credit: Springs Preserve
NEED TO KNOW
- A Woodhouse’s toad was spotted at Springs Preserve, a historical institution in Las Vegas
- “There have been no records of any toads at the preserve since the original springs ran dry sometime around 1962,” the local attraction said
- Springs Preserve has asked the public to help name the toad, with some suggesting Frodo the Toado, Slippy, Toady and Uno
In “toad-ally awesome news,” a toad species has been sighted for the first time in more than six decades in Nevada’s desert wetlands.
Trail cameras captured footage of a male Woodhouse’s toad at the Springs Preserve, a cultural and historical institution in Las Vegas. The local attraction described the surprise sighting as “a big moment in local wildlife history.”
“A Woodhouse’s toad has hopped its way back to the Springs Preserve — no small feat for tiny feet!” Springs Preserve wrote on social media.

Credit: Springs Preserve
The species “have displaced or hybridized with Arizona Toads in the Las Vegas Valley, completely replacing that species since about 1976,” the institution explained. “There have been no records of any toads at the preserve since the original springs ran dry sometime around 1962, so this is the first recorded sighting here in nearly 65 years!”
Officials at the preserve said the footage showed “this adult male calling in the Cienega [desert wetland], possibly an early colonist … though no females have answered yet.”
Springs Preserve has asked its Facebook followers to help name the toad.
“Mack. As in, return of,” one person commented, referring to Mark Morrison’s 1996 R&B hit song “Return of the Mack.”
Other social medias suggested Frodo the Toado, Slippy, Toady and Uno.
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One other claimed that this toad species can easily be found outside of the wetlands, specifically at her nearby pond.
“There’s 100s in the pond at the golf course I live on! I know exactly when summer starts because of the mass croakings that start by sunset,” she wrote. “I’ve had them emerge and hop through my yard to get to the pond every spring … They’re thriving over here.”
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