...clue to why the world's amphibians are  disappearing faster than any class of species since the  dinosaur.
 American scientists are about to publish research  showing that male toads on intensively farmed land are changing sex.  
 The researchers, from the University of Florida, studied  one of the toughest and most aggressive of all amphibian species – the cane  toad, Bufo marinus, whose indestructibility has caused it to become a plague  over much of Australia – only to find that it is being, literally,  unmanned.
 As they will report in a forthcoming issue of  Environmental Health Perspectives, 40 per cent of the males examined from a  heavily farmed part of the state had become hermaphrodites, possessing both  testes and ovaries, and taking on feminine colouring and body characteristics.  Another 20 per cent, while outwardly male, had undergone some  feminisation.
 The results will be buttressed by a Canadian study – to  be published in Aquatic Toxicology – which finds a similar link between farming  and sex changes in local northern leopard frogs.
 The Florida scientists conclude that the changes are  likely to be "the result of multiple exposure to several chemicals at various  concentrations over the lifetime of the toads". Previous, disputed, studies have  suggested that some pesticides may have this effect on amphibians, while  research at Yale University found that male green frogs were being feminised  much more often in suburban gardens than on farmland.
 Whatever the cause, the phenomenon may explain why  amphibians are now the most endangered class of  animal on the planet. More than 120 species are believed to have  become extinct, and almost a third of those that are left are in  danger.
 