Los Angeles Times

Playing cupid for a toad, warts and all

When rare California amphibian gets thirsty for love, a tiny college helps set the mood.

- By Louis Sahagún

DEEP SPRINGS VALLEY, Calif. — When you’re as rare and vulnerable as a black toad, you can’t afford to be coy about romance.

Surrounded by an unforgivin­g desert and forever isolated on a small patch of irrigated ranch land about 50 miles southeast of Yosemite National Park, black toads inhabit the smallest range of any North American amphibian.

So when breeding season arrives, as it did last month, this high desert basin nestled between the Inyo and White mountain ranges resounds with the toad’s high

pitched chirrups, which are reminiscen­t of the peeping of baby chicks.

But this “toad heaven” would not be possible without the annual cooperatio­n of the ranch owner, Deep Springs College. One of the smallest institutio­ns of higher education in the United States, Deep Springs provides the amorous toads with all the basic creature comforts they will need to pair up and produce new crops of eggs and tadpoles.

Among those necessary comforts are peace, quiet and plenty of room for the 2inch-long black toads with warty skin and golden eyes to serenade one another.

Cattle are kept away from the springs that ooze from the base of a nearby cliff from March through September — ensuring that courting toads don’t get trampled, said Tim Gipson, 63, ranch manager at the college.

“My priorities are cattle, toads, water and pasturelan­ds,” Gipson said. “We only graze cattle by the springs in winter, when the toads are dormant and hibernatin­g undergroun­d.”

The college, a complex of low-slung buildings surrounded by cottonwood trees, occupies a remote corner of the high desert, roughly 20 miles from the Nevada border.

Framed by volcanic peaks, rock towers and sagebrush-studded alluvial fans, the area is the very definition of “remote.”

Grazing cattle and saving black toads have been dominant forces on campus operations for half a century and a conservati­on success story at a time when amphibians are facing declines and extinction­s across the United States and around the world.

Once abundant across the vast floodplain­s of the Great Basin, only about 8,500 black toads cling to existence by their stubby little toes at the college, a relic population isolated about

‘It was a bit of a shock to see how desolate, isolated and critically important their habitat is.’ — Greg Pauley, herpetolog­ical curator at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

12,000 years ago when things were starting to heat up.

The toad’s original scientific name, Bufo exsul, acknowledg­es its extreme isolation. It means “exiled toad.”

Greg Pauley, herpetolog­ical curator at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, was a graduate student when he first ventured to Deep Valley Springs two decades ago.

“It was a bit of a shock to see how desolate, isolated and critically important their habitat is,” he recalled. “What’s terrifying now are the increasing demands for use of the desert aquifers that sustain such sites.”

It is one of several geneticall­y distinct toad species that exist only in highly restricted spring-fed habitats and are prone to disease, inbreeding, predation, developmen­t and groundwate­r pumping. Now, longer droughts and rising temperatur­es from climate change are also upsetting the delicate balance between life and death in those habitats.

“These imperiled creatures face a staggering number of threats to their persistenc­e,” said C. Richard Tracy, 76, a professor emeritus at the University of Nevada Reno. The threats, he said, “are compounded by their remarkably small range.”

“The situation requires urgent attention and strong conservati­on initiative­s to protect and monitor these species,” Tracy said.

Cooperativ­e management between Deep Springs College and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife helps protect the black toads and their water sources.

On a recent weekday morning, Padraic MacLeish, 63, director of operations at Deep Springs, led a group of visitors on a tour of the black toads’ nuptial flows.

At the water’s edge, MacLeish carefully scanned dense thickets of willows and bulrush, saying, “Black toads are good at hiding.”

Moments later, he nodded appreciati­vely toward a pair of toads, one of them f loating placidly with only its nose and bulging eyes visible above the surface of the water, and the other clambering up a pile of leaves.

A few feet away, entangled in submerged twigs and pebbles, were long strands of toad eggs that resembled strings of tiny black beads.

With luck, the eggs will hatch in due time, and little tadpoles will begin a precarious existence.

Among those eager to get a glimpse of the toad story unfolding at the springs was Susan Darlington, 63, who was named president of Deep Springs College in September.

Kneeling on muddy banks amid the pervasive smell of cow manure may sound unpleasant, but for Darlington it was an opportunit­y to get close-up photograph­s of one of the rarest amphibians on the planet in its lone stronghold: her backyard.

After snapping dozens of pics with a macro lens from a variety of angles, she remained spellbound.

“Wow! I’ve seen our legendary black toads and have photos to show for it,” she said.

“I’m a real Deep Springer now!”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? ONCE ABUNDANT across the vast f loodplains of the Great Basin, black toads now inhabit the smallest range of any North American amphibian.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ONCE ABUNDANT across the vast f loodplains of the Great Basin, black toads now inhabit the smallest range of any North American amphibian.
 ?? Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? ONLY ABOUT 8,500 black toads cling to existence on a patch of ranch land, a population isolated about 12,000 years ago. The toad’s original scientific name, Bufo exsul, acknowledg­es its remoteness. It means “exiled toad.”
Photograph­s by Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ONLY ABOUT 8,500 black toads cling to existence on a patch of ranch land, a population isolated about 12,000 years ago. The toad’s original scientific name, Bufo exsul, acknowledg­es its remoteness. It means “exiled toad.”
 ??  ?? PADRAIC MacLeish, director of operations at Deep Springs College, searches for black toads in a ditch.
PADRAIC MacLeish, director of operations at Deep Springs College, searches for black toads in a ditch.

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