Do dogs get high from toads? A Comprehensive Guide

What are the clinical signs of toad poisoning?

Within minutes of licking or ingesting a toad, drooling and frothing at the mouth occur. The gums may become very red and signs of pain, including pawing at the mouth or vocalizing, may be seen. Vomiting and diarrhea are common. Signs typically progress rapidly to include stumbling, tremors, seizures, abnormal eye movements, difficulty breathing, increased or decreased heart rate and abnormal heart rhythms. Without rapid treatment, death may occur.

Some dogs are seeking out venomous toads that secrete hallucinogens to get high.

Do dogs get high from toads?

Dogs and humans share many qualities, abilities, and emotional predispositions. It is now becoming clear that dogs and humans may also share certain frailties, such as substance abuse. We are not talking about dogs that slink down to the seedy side of town to buy a hit of their favorite upper, downer, or hallucinogen, and then self administer it to themselves with the risk of death due to overdose, but nonetheless dogs are seeking hallucinogens and risking their lives in the process like many human addicts.

In the case of dogs the “pusher” is not a person hanging around on a corner, wearing gang colors, but a toad. Certain toads produce poisonous substances as part of their defense mechanism. This results in their skin becoming poisonous. In addition they also have parotoid glands behind their eyes which produce a substance which mixes with their sweat or any water on their skin to form a solution that is poisonous enough to kill a grown dog. It is because these toad venoms contain digoxin-like cardiac glycosides, that the ingestion of this fluid can be fatal. An example of such a poisonous toad in America is the Colorado River toad which is also known as the Sonoran Desert toad. However the most widespread poisonous species is the cane toad, which is native to South America, but has been introduced into a number of Caribbean countries, and also into Australia. The importing and release of these toads was done as a pest control measure. Cane toads have a voracious appetite and love to eat the beetles that devastate sugarcane fields (hence the name “cane toad”).

Do dogs get high from toads?

One extremely important fact is that the mixture of toxins produced by these toads includes bufotenine which is a hallucinogen that produces effects much like LSD and mescaline. Some humans have become addicted to the toad venom, and the practice of ingesting these substances has been popularly referred to as “toad licking.” People use the venom to get high, and to have a psychedelic experiences of a hallucinatory nature (and because some believe that it is a potent aphrodisiac). In fact, Albert Most founded the Church of the Toad of Light, based on advocating the recreational use of toad venoms.

Bufotenine, the hallucinogenic component of the toad venom, is a controlled substance that is legally in the same class as things like LSD and is therefore outlawed in many places. There have been many cases mentioned in the press of people arrested for its use. Thus the New York Times Magazine carried a story in 1994 about a California teacher who became the first person to be arrested for possessing the venom of toads. In 2007 a man in Kansas City was charged with possession of a controlled substance after authorities determined that he intended to use toad venom to get high. Over the ensuing years a number of other stories appeared about people extracting bufotenine from toads and preparing it in a form which could be smoked in order to have the psychedelic experience.

So where do dogs enter this picture? Apparently dogs licking these dangerous toads is a worldwide problem, however there appears to be an epidemic of it in Queensland Australia. You see, apparently the toad secretions taste sweet. So it appears that some dogs first lick a toad because, like all dogs, they have a fondness for sweetness. What follows (if the dog survives) is a hallucinogenic experience. Apparently some dogs become addicted to these psychedelic effects, and veterinarians in Queensland are reporting an increasing number of canine repeat offenders, which they dub “serial lickers,” since these animals are being treated for cane toad poisoning several times a year.

Australian veterinarian, Megan Pickering has said, “The phenomenon of animals deliberately getting intoxicated by cane toads is fascinating. It just seems unbelievable that an animal will go back for a second try. But nevertheless we do have many documented cases of patients who deliberately—on a regular basis—will seek out a toad and they seem to be able to lick the toad in such a way that they seem to get a very small dose.”

Pickering and other vets warned that some dogs are so desperate for a fix that they deliberately hunt down these particular toads to stimulate the excretion of the deadly poison, which they can then lick from their prey. Unfortunately, like all addicts, these dogs are risking their lives for their cheap thrill.

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Do dogs get high from toads?

How is toad poisoning diagnosed?

Most cases of toad poisoning in dogs are diagnosed when a pet has the expected signs and a known or suspected exposure to poisonous toads. No specific test is available to confirm toad poisoning. Blood work, radiographs (x-rays) of the chest or abdomen and ECG may be helpful to determine the severity of poisoning and necessary supportive care.

Dobby the dog tripping on cane toads

Vets are warning some pooches may become addicted to the hallucinogenic and are risking their lives trying to get their next toad fix.

Its being reported the dogs have worked out how to lick the toad just enough to get high.

“This phenomenon of animals deliberately getting intoxicated by cane toads, its fascinating,” says veterinarian Megan Pickering. “It just seems unbelievable that an animal will go back for a second try.

“But nevertheless we do have many documented cases of patients who deliberately – on a regular basis – will seek out a toad and they seem to be able to lick the toad in such a way that they seem to get a very small dose.”

The serial licking was first reported in the Northern Territory in 2005. But no one really listened. Now it has spread to Queensland and is back in the headlines.

Vets insist its a true story and a real problem – theyre warning dog owners to keep their loved ones inside, away from temptation.