No verified entries meet the strict criteria for “Amphibians of Chad.”
Note the empty result exists because the list requires species with clear, published, and georeferenced records inside Chad. Demand records that are recent, taxonomically verified, and tied to precise localities. Many regional frog and toad species appear in nearby countries, but none have robust, verifiable records that satisfy those standards for Chad alone.
Understand why this happens. Much of Chad is arid Sahel and Sahara, which naturally supports few amphibians. Field surveys in southern Chad are limited by logistics and past instability. Old museum labels often lack precise coordinates or use outdated names. Taxonomic changes and unconfirmed museum identifications further remove doubtful records from a modern, verifiable checklist.
Check close alternatives and related categories. Amphibian species are well documented in the Lake Chad basin and in neighboring countries (for example, African bullfrog — Hoplobatrachus occipitalis; Common African toad — Sclerophrys regularis; various Ptychadena and Hyperolius species), but these are near matches, not confirmed Chad records. Instead, explore regional lists (Sahel and Lake Chad basin), national checklists of neighboring states, AmphibiaWeb, IUCN, GBIF, and citizen-science platforms for the best current information and possible future updates.

