Phrynobatrachus tokba

[1][2][3] It is found in West Africa from Ghana westward to Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone,[1][3] and Guinea-Bissau.

The fingers and toes lack terminal discs and interdigital webbing.

The dorsum is smooth to slightly warty, with three pairs of scapular warts, sometimes fusing into ridges.

[1] It is a diurnal species found in leaf litter or grass tufts, sometimes sleeping on low vegetation at night.

It is somewhat adaptable, but changes that lead to a near-complete opening of the landscape (agricultural expansion, logging, and human settlements) are a threat to it.