The Kalinga narrowmouth toad (Kaloula kalingensis) is a species of frog in the family Microhylidae.
The fingers have white tubercles underneath and small pads at the tips and the toes are slightly webbed.
Its habitat is lowland or lower mountain rainforests and their fringes where it is largely found on the forest floor and in rain-filled holes in trees and other temporary water bodies.
[1] In the breeding season, males call from holes in trees and other locations several metres off the forest floor and from under logs.
The major threats it faces are the degradation of its forest habitat but it is unknown whether the total numbers of individuals is in decline or not.