The preoptic area (POA) plays an important role in fever in mammals, but the role of this region in fever in ectothermic vertebrates has never been assessed. Toads, like all ectotherms, regulate their body temperature (T(b)) primarily by behavior and develop behavioral fever when injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that the POA plays a role in the behavioral fever induced by LPS in the toad Bufo paracnemis. We made electrolytic lesions in the POA of toads (0.3 mA, 8 s) and measured preferred T(b) using a thermal gradient. After a period of 24h inside the gradient chamber, control, sham-operated and lesioned toads were systemically injected with LPS (200 micro g kg(-1)) or pyrogen-free saline. There was no significant effect of POA lesion in animals at their normal preferred T(b). LPS caused a significant increase in preferred T(b) of control and sham-operated toads, but lesions in the POA abolished this response. These results indicate that the POA is an important site in the central nervous system of toads, and perhaps of all vertebrates, involved in the development of fever.