The female cane toad can pump herself up to mega-size to throw off smaller males striving to mate with her, Australian biologists said.

The unusual tactic suggests that female anurans, as frogs and toads are called, may have far more power to select their sex partner than thought, according to their study in in the British journal, Biology Letters.

Female cane toads (Bufo marinus) are typically choosier than males when it comes to reproduction.

They discriminate among potential mates by approaching the toad with the best call.

But as they head to a rendezvous with the hunk with the mightiest ribbit, they also have to run the gauntlet of excited rival males.

An unwanted suitor will seek to climb on the female's back, grasping her tightly in the armpit or groin, waiting until she starts laying her eggs in order to fertilise them.

This is where the pneumatic trick comes in, say the scientists, led by Benjamin Phillips of the University of Sydney.

By inflating sacs in her body, the female is able to loosen the grip and the luckless male slides off her body, defeated.

As a result, the female is able to choose the size of her mate, a factor that is important to the species, says the team.

Fertilisation among cane toads is most successful when males and females are similar in size.

Mr Phillips and his two colleagues worked on the small-to-XXXL hunch after noting that the cane toad puffs itself up in the presence of a predator to make itself look scarier.

Female toads likewise inflate at copulation time, but until now this was presumed to be a reflex to being pushed, kicked and occasionally flipped over as panting males wrestled for amorous contact.

- AFP