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Alligator Eats Marine Toads 01 Stock Footage

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American Alligators are opportunistic feeders and have been know to prey on the invasive and highly toxic cane toad (aka Bufo Toad or Marine Toad) in South Florida. Regardless, swallowing a bloated cane toad is not an easy task even for Florida’s top predators. Alligators in general ambush their prey than dragging it into the deep water and drowning it. These killing technic doesn’t work alway, in particular if the water level is too low. The cane toad like most amphibians is able to stay submerge under water for a long time, avoid being drowned easily. But during this time, the toad will secreted its milky toxic into the alligator’s mouth, which might kill the gator within a few hours.
Alligator Eats Cane Toad was filmed by Heiko Kiera aka Ojatro in Florida in 2014.
The Marine Toad (Bufo marinus), also known as cane toad, is a large, terrestrial true toad which is native to Central and South America, but has been introduced to various islands throughout Oceania and the Caribbean. The marine toad is a prolific breeder; females lay single-clump spawns with thousands of eggs. Its reproductive success is partly because of opportunistic feeding: it has a diet, unusual among Anurans, of both dead and living matter. Adults average 3.9–5.9 in in length; the largest recorded specimen weighed 5.8 lb with a length of 15 in from snout to vent. The marine toad has poison glands, and the tadpoles are highly toxic to most animals if ingested. Because of its voracious appetite, the cane toad has been introduced to many regions of the Pacific and the Caribbean islands as a method of agricultural pest control. The species derives its common name cane toad from its use against the cane beetle. The cane toad is now considered a pest and an invasive species in many of its introduced regions.
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