The Newest, Cutest Baby Animals from the World's Zoos & Aquariums

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Dallas Zoo recently welcomed their first ever clutch of Texas Horned Lizard hatchlings – 39 babies in all! Also known as “horny toads”, Texas Horned Lizards, were once quite common, but are now disappearing.

This threatened species has vanished in East and Central Texas, and is now decreasing in North Texas, too. While these babies may be only the size of a penny now, they’re helping ensure the survival of this Texas icon.

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3_11222491_10153085148686819_2943863045877479041_oPhoto Credits: Dallas Zoo

The Dallas Zoo has taken an active role in the protection of this threatened reptile. The Dallas Zoo's Texas Horned Lizard Conservation page (http://dzmconservation.wix.com/texashornedlizards#!) provides great information and resources.

Horned Lizards, also known as "horny toads", represent a unique group of lizards that inhabit the southern United States and northern Mexico. The Texas Horned Lizard, Phrynosoma cornutum, is perhaps the most recognizable species of Horned Lizard. It is the largest North American native species of Horned Lizard (Family: Phrynosomatidae) and has the widest distribution of any other Horned Lizard species in the United States.

Once extremely common, they are now in decline throughout much of their range. The Texas Horned Lizard is perhaps the most threatened member of this group, with estimated population declines of greater than 30% across its range (Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, and northern Mexico) and even higher in Texas. Populations have disappeared in East and Central Texas, and are decreasing in North Texas as well.

Staff of the Dallas Zoo is studying the life history of Texas Horned Lizards at the Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch. The Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch is 4,700 acre preserve located in Fisher County, Texas. By collecting lizard life history data (including but not limited to population densities, habitat preferences, diet, sex ratios, activity patterns, etc.) they hope to shed valuable light on the ecology of this threatened native Texan.

41 responses to “Dallas Zoo Welcomes Iconic Texas Hatchlings”

  1. momo246 Avatar
    momo246

    cool!

  2. Smartypants Avatar
    Smartypants

    Aren’t they adorable! (in my head I’m hearing Yosemite Sam spluttering “Great horny toads!”). 😀

  3. P Avatar
    P

    I want to put some of these on our place. We have 50 acres and this year, we have red ant beds everywhere, the first time in many years. It would be a great place for the horn toads to live. Love these little guys, hope they get going again.

  4. Curt Avatar
    Curt

    Need to bring back the Harvester ants, which were a staple of their diet. Harvesters were decimated by Fire ants, which contributed to horned toad decline.

  5. Sheri clauss Avatar
    Sheri clauss

    Are there tax breaks if you have lots of these little guys, something like people get if there property is by a bird preserve?

  6. D. Offield Avatar
    D. Offield

    I am so excited they are studying and protecting them. I used to play with them as a kid and was concerned since I had not seen even one in years. They are awesomely cute little guys!! I want to take care of horny toads 🙂

  7. Connie Pothier Avatar
    Connie Pothier

    Love horned toads. Would love to have them on my property, also, in southeast Texas. Gulf Coast. Is there a Texas program to educate/encourage people to raise these beautiful critters?

  8. Brenda Stout Avatar
    Brenda Stout

    Fond memories of me & my brothers and neighborhood friends finding “Horny Toads” in East Texas. My children who are all in their mid to late forties use to also love to find them. They were wonderful to have in a garden because they ate all the bugs off the plants. I don’t think my grandchildren have ever seen any. We believe the tremendous onslaught of Fire Ants has killed them off. If we don’t get rid of these nasty ants how can we bring them back here? I sure hope they find a way. They are too big a part of Texas not to have them.

  9. Karen Eddy Avatar
    Karen Eddy

    I would put up with big red ants if we could have our horny toads back. I used to raise the new borns in North Texas as a child so the other animals wouldn’t kill them. The greatest little creatures I know. We must bring them back!!!!

  10. M Shumaker Avatar
    M Shumaker

    We have quite a few on our acerage in the Panhandle of Texas. A lot of people have told me they are seeing more and more. They must be making a comeback.

  11. melinda.middleton.mm@gmail.com Avatar
    melinda.middleton.mm@gmail.com

    Praying for the little babies. Hope they grow and thrive!

  12. coby Avatar
    coby

    i’d be willing to raise some too. i live in ada, ok.

  13. Ginger Walker Avatar
    Ginger Walker

    We had one for many years that lived under our house in Vernon Tx. We were very protective of it, and would check on it so our granddaughter could watch it grow. We left it wild but it was a part of her life. I would love to help out.

  14. David Avatar
    David

    As a kid in the late 50’s – 60’s, growing up in Dallas, I used to find horny toads all over the place. I started keeping horny toads and turtles(box turtles and terrapins which I found in the wild)in my younger sister’s sandbox. I would feed the turtles different vegetables, fruit/berries, and even canned dog food at times which would attract flies and ants for the horny toads. Both the horny toads and turtles would lay eggs every year. I’d always have babies of both, keeping some and letting others go. The ones I still had upon graduating from high school and going off to college, I took out and let them go in a natural preserve area of a Dallas park. It has been many, many years since I have seen a horny toad. It would be worth a trip to Dallas (or anywhere I could find) to see the horny toad once again. I would enjoy being a part of bringing them back.

  15. tina Avatar
    tina

    Awesome! These wonderful lizards were a giant part of my childhood. Thank you for bringing them back!

  16. John Donaho Avatar
    John Donaho

    Kudos! Well done!

  17. Angie Barrows Avatar
    Angie Barrows

    Need more? My backyard is full of them! I just moved a tiny one (like pictured above) from my front doorstep to a special rockpile we made for them in the back yard. #lovinthesecutecrittersinSnyder,Tx

  18. Hal Cleveland Avatar
    Hal Cleveland

    What is causing their demise? Insecticides? Fire Ants? I know the common Red Ant was supposed to have been overtaken by the Fire Ants, or that was what I was told.

  19. Marilyn Dittrich Avatar
    Marilyn Dittrich

    Loved them as a child. Live in my grandparents old house where we would find these guys. Makes me sad they are gone. Do have one on my liscense plate however.

  20. Ray Click Avatar
    Ray Click

    In the early 70’s the govt in all their wisedom flew over several counties in N. Texas
    Dropping a poisen that was supposed to kill fireants. At the time it was reported that the big red ant was a natural predator for fire ants. The poisen succeded in killing the big red ants on our property, but had no effect on fireants. Both Grayson and Collin counties.

  21. char Avatar
    char

    We all need a little rock pile in the corner of our yard…leave some leaves and twigs in another corner.

  22. Priscilla Jones Avatar
    Priscilla Jones

    I’m sorry to say that I am part of the reason that there are fewer “Horned Toads”. When I was young I found that people up North would buy them and I would go to the back pasture and catch them. Put them in little boxes with holes in them and mail them up North. They would pay me for the toads by the inch. I don’t know how big their market was but I definitely contributed. I love Horned Toads!

  23. Bill Avatar
    Bill

    With out a doubt, you are correct, It needs to go viral that the Road Runner is a strong predator of the “Horny Toad” I find this contrary to my liking
    I feel closer to the Toad because of his limited diet & lack of evasive habitat, I now feel guilty for enjoying our lil country man, EL PIZANO

  24. Geri Avatar
    Geri

    I am sure there were a lot more people who did the same thing. It is really too bad conservation of many species of creatures and animals was not implemented way back. But, again, it’s a “who-knew-type situation.”

  25. joe Avatar
    joe

    in the 1950s and early 60s, I’d catch them and sell them to a “science facility” in S. Texas for a dime a piece…i made purty good money..i haven’t seen one in probably 20 years or more.

  26. Geri Avatar
    Geri

    It is awesome of you to care enough to help them survive. I am so happy you do. Wish we still had some here but would not even consider getting any. I am not sure I could be of any help to them; even tho I love them, too.

  27. Steve Avatar
    Steve

    If you had spent more time studying your spelling book than chasing horny toads you might have been the next president of the United States😜. I think it’s a sign from God. As more horny toads disappear, it’s a sign of Christ’s return.

  28. Dallastom1 Avatar
    Dallastom1

    we had many on our street and would put a string on them and walk them

  29. joseph Avatar
    joseph

    You are an idiot sorry this has nothing to due with god

  30. Rachel Russell Avatar
    Rachel Russell

    My grandmother would “getcha” for messing with her horny toads,

  31. KERRY FOSTER Avatar
    KERRY FOSTER

    someone needs to lay off the coolaid…

  32. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    I took Steve’s comment about the second coming, as well as criticism of your spelling, to be tongue in cheek. Everyone knows “purty” is the proper spelling when you are writing Texas English. 😉

  33. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    I no longer live in Texas, but when I went for a visit in 2010, I could not find a single colony of Red Ants even in places where they used to be thick. I wanted to find a horny toad to show my daughters but then found out about their sad fate. It’s like losing a little chunk of my Texas childhood. A cute little chunk, too.

  34. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    Oh, no! I wouldn’t want to have to chose between horny toads and road runners. When I went back to Texas in 2010, a major goals was to find one of each to show my daughters. Failed on both counts. I would rather blame the fire ants for forcing out the red ants than blame road runners. Please tell me road runners are innocent?!

  35. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    You are very lucky to still be able to enjoy those precious little critters!!

  36. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    We lived in Brown County, County Seat of TX. We played with them all the time. My grandmother gave us an empty oatmeal box to put them in and they would run around in circles. We had many Red Ant beds back then and that is where they would always be, sitting right on top of it. No more Red Ants..no more ” horny toads”. SAD. Several years ago my 4 yr. old grandson, now 24, saw one while walking a dirt path on the ranch outside town. He had no clue what it was. 🙂 That was amazing and was the first one I had seen in many years. I hope they can save them.

  37. Sarah Greathouse Avatar
    Sarah Greathouse

    Roadrunners have been disappearing just like like the Horny toads!!! As a child & very young adult, they both were everywhere. Anytime you took a drive there be one running beside the road or across it. Anytime you took a hike (Walk-A-Bout) you’d find a horny toad on your way. That was in both Texas, New Mexico, & Arizona – we traveled alot when I was young. I used to find them even in Central & Southern Colorado. And yes, now that you mention it, I never see any Big Red Ant Colonies anymore.
    SO – DEVISTATINGLY – SAD!!!!
    We need to RALLY Together & chant, “Bring Back My Ant – My Runner – My Toad”!!!
    That would really make a GREAT PRESIDENTIAL SLOGAN — I WOULD VOTE FOR THAT CANDIDATE 4 SURE!!!!
    (especially now – given our current choices)

  38. Virginia Hammond Avatar
    Virginia Hammond

    We live in The Woodlands Senior Retirement Community in Burnet, TX. There is a roadrunner which is frequently seen in the open areas behind our house, apparently searching for food. Our breakfast nook looks out at our bird feeders and birdbath. One morning recently, my husband almost came out of his chair. “Would you look at that,” he said. Our resident roadrunner had a snake about two feet long in his beak and was quickly making his way to the thicket behind us. I guess he feasted that day! We do enjoy watching him.

  39. Bjo Trimble Avatar

    Back in ancient times when I was a kid, there were road runners and horny toads in the Southern California deserts, too. I liked to catch the horned toads and show them to other kids, to teach them that the toads were not dangerous or harmful. Then I’d take the critter back to where I found it and let it go. As i watched one li’l guy try to scratch his neck, I decided to help by rubbing VERY gently with a dull pencil. Immediately, the horny toad stretched out his neck, and spread his claws wide. He especially liked to be rubbed under his neck “horns”. I tried it with other horny toads and they all enjoyed the experience. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen one in the wild.

  40. William Stamper Avatar
    William Stamper

    How many horny toads would you guess at that you sent away in the mail ? Just curious…

  41. William Stamper Avatar
    William Stamper

    Back In the 1970’s and early 1980’s as a young lad, I would always catch them in and around the Red Oak area which is just south of Dallas. I had thought of them time to time through the years wondering about it myself of not really seeing them around anymore. Probably last time if seen one was maybe in 1982. I miss the little creatures. They were so harmless. I don’t think they deserve what’s been happening to them. I personally think that yes the pesticides have so much to do with it. That’s about around the time when farming really started booming with much more technology. I do hope and pray that can make a comeback but I’m very hesitant because of even more so in today’s farming there’s way more pesticide usage. So, so sad .. ☹️

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