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Leopard Toads – Archival Paper Print

$ 80.00$ 350.00

 

Medium: Archival Print on Hahnemuhle 320gsm archival paper. The print has an additional 3cm white border with edition number, title and artist’s signature pencilled in at the bottom.

Edition: 500

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Description

Leopard Toads

By Marc Alexander from his ‘In The Balance‘ series. Leopard Toads, archival paper prints in various sizes.

 

Archival Prints

Many of Marc’s artworks are available as fine art digital prints. Professionally photographed and printed on large format inkjet printers, these prints are limited edition numbered bottom left and signed bottom right. The paper used is 320g Hahnemuhle archival watercolour paper. The process employs fade resistant, archival inks, which boast a 100+ year fade-proof guarantee.

The paper prints are sold plastic wrapped on an acid-free foamcore backing board. These prints are also available in varying sizes of canvas.

 

Leopard Toads

This beautiful South African toad can reach an impressive size of 140 mm in body length and, like all toads, has a rough skin and a large parotid gland behind each eye. Its upper body has chocolate to reddish-brown patches on a bright yellow background, and there usually is a yellow stripe running down the middle of the back. The underside is granular and cream coloured, with a darker throat in males. The eyes are relatively large with horizontally elliptical pupils. The advertisement call of the males (heard at breeding time) is a deep snoring sound repeated every few seconds, and in chorus sounds like a tractor or motorcycle engine.

The western leopard toad is threatened throughout most of its range by general development and habitat degradation.

Specific urban threats:
• Habitat loss and fragmentation – restricts the foraging area and movement of toads, and can lead to the isolation and loss of populations and breeding sites.
• Road traffic – results in the death of hundreds of toads each year, especially during the breeding season when they migrate to and from breeding sites;
• Drowning in water bodies with vertical sides, such as swimming pools and canalized rivers;
• Barriers such as walls, embankments and canals restrict the movement of toads.

Specific threats at some breeding sites include, pollutants in water; introduced predatory fish (such as barbel) and invasive floating plants and reedbeds – reduce and degrade toad breeding habitat. This species is now protected by the Nature Conservation Ordinance of the Western Cape Province.

 

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