To eat a toad you have to skin it, and to catch it you have to be careful of the venom that spews out. If it's just a matter of eating, you can eat anything you can chew, swallow, and digest; the meat is edible, but the skin is poisonous.
The traditional way to take a toad's coat is to skin the toad directly and process it into a toad coat. A toad can only be processed into a dry toadstool, which wastes resources and reduces economic benefits, and is laborious and time-consuming.
Adopting the new technology, the toad, like a snake, can be peeled off year after year, and can be peeled off 3 to 4 times a year, and does not affect the healthy growth of the toad in the slightest.
According to the "Compendium of Materia Medica" and other records, the toad skin is a kind of natural and wonderful medicine that can cure the evil swelling and other difficult and complicated diseases. It can especially resist the spread of cancer cells and inhibit the growth of cancer cells. In addition, it is a remarkable treatment for dozens of diseases such as hepatitis B, cirrhosis of the liver, hepatic ascites, leukemia, boils, sores, breast tumors, bone tuberculosis, osteomyelitis, children's chancre, consumptive fever, and so on.
Extended information:
Toads are used in many parts of the country, and are also known as "toads". p>Toads are found throughout the country. From the end of spring to the end of fall, the daytime lurking in the grass and crops, or around the house and dry land under the stones, earth holes, dusk often in the roadside, grass crawling for food. More slow and clumsy, not good at swimming, most of the time for creeping crawling, but also in a dangerous time will be small steps short distance small jump.
The toad is a general term for animals in the family of anurans and toads. The most common toad is the large toad, commonly known as a toad. The skin is rough and the back is covered with large and small bumps, which are sebaceous glands. The largest pair of these are the postauricular glands located on the side of the head above the eardrum. These glands secrete white venom, which is the raw material for making toadstools.
Toads generally refer to the more than 300 species of toads in the family Bufoidae, which are divided into 26 genera. They are found in all regions of the world except Madagascar, Polynesia and the poles.
During the day, large toads tend to hide in shady places, such as under rocks, in earth holes, or in bushes. In the evening, they are active in ponds, ditches, riverbanks, fields, vegetable gardens, roadsides, or around houses, especially after rains, when they often concentrate in dry places to feed on various pests. The big toad lurks in the silt or rotten grass under the water in winter, and also overwinters in the mud on land.
Environmental characteristics
1. Living in the mud or living under the rocks or grass, night foraging.
2. Inhabits moist grass, common at night or after rain. Preys on a variety of harmful insects and other small animals.
Resource Distribution
1. It is distributed in Northeast, North, East and Central China, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Sichuan and Guizhou.
2. Distributed in Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Fujian, Taiwan, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Sichuan, Guizhou and Yunnan.
Reference link - Baidu Encyclopedia - Toad