No verified entries meet the criteria for a complete, checked list titled “The Complete List of Amphibians of Brunei.”
Brunei currently lacks a single, published national checklist that meets the strict criteria used here: every species with scientific and common name, a clear Brunei range, habitat notes, photo, and an IUCN citation. Many users search “Amphibians of Brunei” to find exact species lists, maps, and conservation status. That precise, fully verified package does not exist in one place right now.
Taxonomy changes, limited field surveys, and old or vague museum records make a complete national list hard to produce. Many amphibian records are reported for Borneo as a whole and not pinned to Brunei with verifiable locality data. Some species are cryptic or recently split by taxonomists, so names and ranges shift fast. Authoritative sources—IUCN, AmphibiaWeb, regional checklists and museum catalogs—contain useful data, but they often stop short of a Brunei-only, fully validated dataset.
Close alternatives do exist. Use regional lists such as “Amphibians of Borneo,” IUCN country pages, AmphibiaWeb searches, and museum records from nearby Sabah and Sarawak. Common Bornean groups that appear in those sources and may occur in or near Brunei include Microhyla (microhylid frogs), Limnonectes (fanged frogs), Kaloula (narrow-mouthed toads), and Rhacophorus (flying frogs). Check those regional lists, local field guides, and conservation reports for the best available info rather than a single national checklist.

