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Global Animal Guide

What Is the Most Poisonous Frog in the World?

Golden poison frogs carry enough batrachotoxin to kill multiple adults. Poison dart frogs get toxins from diet in the wild; captive-bred frogs are harmless.

Global Animal Guide · June 28, 2026

What Is the Most Poisonous Frog in the World?

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Quick answer

The golden poison frog (Phyllobates terribilis) is the most toxic — one wild frog carries enough batrachotoxin to kill several adult humans.

Last updated: June 2026 — figures reflect widely cited scientific estimates.

The golden poison frog (Phyllobates terribilis) is the most toxic — one wild frog carries enough batrachotoxin to kill several adult humans.

Quick answer

Golden poison frogs carry enough batrachotoxin to kill multiple adults. Poison dart frogs get toxins from diet in the wild; captive-bred frogs are harmless.

Why this record matters

Superlative animals illustrate extreme evolution — speed for escape, venom for subduing prey, longevity from slow metabolism. Understanding the champion species helps explain broader biology across their groups.

How the record is measured

Scientists use repeatable methods: radar and GPS for speed, LD50 assays for venom toxicity, ring counts and radiocarbon for age, and decibel metres or hydrophones for sound. Media headlines sometimes mix dive speed with level flight or conflate venom toxicity with bites per year.

Runners-up and common myths

Many “fastest” or “deadliest” lists swap champions when definitions change. Always ask whether the record is peak burst vs sustained speed, venom potency vs human fatalities, or captive vs wild individuals.

Conservation note

Record-holding species often face habitat loss and climate pressure. Protecting ecosystems preserves not only charismatic winners but the food webs they represent.


Related reading: Animal profiles · Fastest animals on Earth · Support wildlife protection

Frequently asked questions

What Is the Most Poisonous Frog in the World

The golden poison frog (Phyllobates terribilis) is the most toxic — one wild frog carries enough batrachotoxin to kill several adult humans.

How do scientists measure this record?

Records come from peer-reviewed studies, GPS tracking, high-speed video, toxicology assays, and acoustic meters — field conditions always add variation.

Can the record holder change?

Yes — new measurements, species reclassification, or better technology can update rankings. Always check whether speed, venom, or size is measured differently.