It's funny you asked that question before I got to....Even at larval stage? Thats pretty crazy
They are toxic to a lot of things...strangely Crocodylus porosus is completely unaffected by it, yet at the same time Crocodylus johnstoni becomes severely ill and usually dies afterwards. I am curious how they affect other Crocodilians and with some research my theory about saltwater neutralizing bufotoxins could be somewhat correct. I don't know of any amphibians capable of surviving in saltwater, despite the original name, "Marine Toad"........so in that case, why would their toxins???? How is C. niloticus or any of the other 4-5 African Crocs affected by it,These guys are Bufo marinus, the
Cane Toad. They're actually some toxicity concerns around dogs etc.
I knew they toad-trained Quolls, but never heard of Monitor lizards doing it....must be smarter than I thought.Those things are causing issues in Australia unfortunately the dominated the environment and can only be removed by man as predator numbers have dropped by almost 90% in areas where they live.
Luckily monitors have been trained with relative success to avoid them by giving them small, less poisonous toads
IDK I'm thinking good ol' salt might be even more of a super-mineral than we thought. Soooooo many uses.......Amphibians die in saltwater because it dehydrates them. I'm not sure you can kill a toxin by dehydrating it. I imagine saltwater would eventually break the toxins down, but I'm not sure how long it would take.