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Individuals at an invasion front may allocate most of their resources to dispersing rather than reproducing. In the invasive cane toad in Australia, researchers report, invasion-front males have ...
Cane toads, like most critters in the Australian wilds, are hungry creatures. But if it were not for their hearty appetite for bugs, the toads — native to the South American jungles — may ...
"Our front-desk volunteer who admitted the toad was shocked to see such a large, unusual toad when she looked in the bucket that the client was carrying," Brittney Yohannes, communications and ...
a person should use a garden hose to rinse its mouth from back to front, and consult a veterinarian. According to Amy Burnett with Arizona Game and Fish, incidents related to the toad may be on ...
This involves releasing small cane toads or tadpoles ahead of the cane toad front, so that animals which eat them get a smaller amount of toxin. It is enough to make them ill, but not enough to ...
The team surveyed crocodiles in four regions of the Victoria river before the cane toad front arrived in… Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox! We'll also keep you up to date with ...