Most members of this genus have suffered serious declines, in which the disease chytridiomycosis appears to have played a significant role: T. diurnus is believed to be extinct, while all others except T. liemi are listed as critically endangered by the IUCN.
The Eungella Torrent Frog is the only known Myobatrachid known to show its presence by the movement of its body.
Of the six species in the genus Taudactylus, one of the most primitive groups of frogs in Australia, two are restricted to the Wet Tropics of Queensland.
In 1992 an experimental translocation experiment was being conducted to determine the cause of population declines in T. acutirostris.
[5] They collected specimens and dispatched them to veterinary pathologists at James Cook University.