This species has a characteristically short and explosive breeding period, often lasting only one to three days. This explosive breeding combined with the ecological condition of dry seasonal forests have influenced the evolution of their courtship behavior and male-female interactions. There is size
sexual dimorphism in this species with females being larger than males, and male-male contests are largely absent during the short breeding period. Due to the absence of male-male competition and territoriality, females select their mates based on the frequency and tonality of advertisement calls. The characteristics of the advertisement call can give females insight to male size, which affects mating with larger females opting for larger mates over smaller ones.
Breeding Breeding in this species occurs after heavy rains in small temporary pools. Based on Costa Rican populations, clutch sizes range from 2,000 to 8,000 eggs. The Mexican burrowing toads are considered explosive breeders, and reproduce in a way where many individuals exit burrows at the same time to gather at temporary pools of water for breeding to occur. The males then float on the surface of the water and inflate their bodies while making a characteristic call that attracts females. The toad's mating periods is between one and three days, one of the shortest seasons among amphibians, and after this period they burrow back into the ground and remain there until the next breeding season.
Sexual maturity Sexual maturity in the Mexican burrowing toad is determined by examining testes size in males and ovarian stages in females. The presence of enlarged testes and a larger body size is used to determine maturity in males, and various ovarian characteristics including oviduct size and shape are used in females. Females are most likely to be carrying eggs during May and June, but reproduction can occur in October and January as well. Males produce two types of
mating calls during the breeding season to attract females. These calls are the pre-advertisement and advertisement calls. In one observational study of the reproductive behavior of The Mexican burrowing toad, the pre-advertisement call was often produced just before the advertisement call. The advertisement call is a single tone with an upward tone, with a duration of about 1.36 seconds. The pre-advertisement call was a single short sound without modulation, and was of higher frequency than the advertisement calls. The calls attract females, after which the male and female will participate in amplexus. In all the mating pairs of
R. dorsalis, females mate with smaller males but large females often mate with the larger males present. Females will inflate their bodies during breeding season which allows them to reduce the ability of smaller males to maintain amplexus. ==Conservation==