The Miyako toad is somewhat warty, but less so than the Japanese common toad.[9] It has a grey-brown to reddish-brown back with some paler spots and stripes, and a whitish belly with some black spots.[9] Males have a snout–vent length (SVL) of 61–113 millimetres (2.4–4.4 in), with a mean of 85 millimetres (3.3 in), while females are a little larger, at 77–119 millimetres (3.0–4.7 in), mean of 97 millimetres (3.8 in).[4] Its width is around 36% of its SVL, its hand and arm length, 44%, the length of its tibia, 35% in males and 33% in females, and its relatively flat parotoid gland, c. 17%.[4] Males have black nuptial pads.[4] There is no vocal sac.[4]
The Miyako toad's diet largely comprises small invertebrates such as ants, beetles, snails, and worms.[4] The breeding season runs from September to March.[4] Its mating call includes five distinct notes, lasting in total some 1.5 seconds.[4] Females lay some twelve to fourteen thousand eggs, some 1.7–2.0 millimetres (0.067–0.079 in) in diameter.[4] The small dark tadpoles reach a length of around 30 millimetres (1.2 in); the SVL on metamorphosis, which occurs after March, is 11 millimetres (0.43 in).[4][9]
^ abcOkada, Y. (1931). The Tailless Batrachians of the Japanese Empire. Tokyo: Imperial Agricultural Experiment Station. p. 47.
^ abKawamura, T.; Nishioka, M.; Ueda, H. (1980). "Inter- and intraspecific hybrids among Japanese, European and American toads". Scientific Report of the Laboratory for Amphibian Biology, Hiroshima University. 4: 1–125. doi:10.15027/333. ISSN0386-3166.
^ abcMatsui Masafumi[in French] (1984). "Morphometric variation analyses and revision of the Japanese toads (Genus Bufo, Bufonidae)". Contributions from the Biological Laboratory, Kyoto University. 26 (3–4): 209–428. hdl:2433/156031. ISSN0452-9987.
^ abcdefghijklmMatsui, Masafumi; Maeda, Norio, eds. (2018). 日本産カエル大鑑 [Encyclopaedia of Japanese Frogs] (in Japanese and English). Tokyo: Bun-Ichi Sogo Shuppan. pp. 40–43. ISBN978-4-8299-8843-5.
^Nokariya, H; Hasegawa, Y.[in Japanese] (1985). "Fossil frogs from Pinza-Abu Cave, Miyako Island, Okinawa, Japan". ピンザアブ:ピンザアブ洞穴発掘調査報告 [Pinza-Abu: Reports on Excavation of the Pinza-Abu Cave] (in Japanese). Naha: Okinawa Prefectural Board of Education. pp. 151–159.
^ abcGoris, Richard C.; Maeda, Norio (2004). Guide to the Amphibians and Reptiles of Japan. Malabar: Krieger Publishing Company. pp. 46–48. ISBN1-57524-085-8.
^Ministry of the Environment, ed. (2014). レッドデータブック2014 —日本の絶滅のおそれのある野生生物— 3 爬虫類・両生類 [Red Data Book 2014 — Threatened Wildlife of Japan — Volume 3, Reptilia / Amphibia] (in Japanese). Gyōsei Corporation. p. 145. ISBN978-4-324-09897-4.