17 results on '"Brown, Gregory P"'
Search Results
2. Divergence in life-history traits among three adjoining populations of the sea snake Emydocephalus annulatus (Hydrophiinae, Elapidae).
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Shine, Richard, Brown, Gregory P., and Goiran, Claire
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LIFE history theory , *SNAKES , *WATER temperature , *PHILOPATRY , *SURVIVAL rate - Abstract
Life-history traits such as rates of growth, survival and reproduction can vary though time within a single population, or through space among populations, due to abiotically-driven changes in resource availability. In terrestrial reptiles, parameters such as temperature and rainfall generate variation in life-histories—but other parameters likely are more important in marine systems. We studied three populations of sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus) in adjacent bays in the IndoPacific archipelago of New Caledonia. The extreme philopatry of individual snakes allows us to unambiguously allocate each animal to one of the three populations. Although water temperatures and rainfall do not differ over this small scale, one site experiences more intense winds, restricting opportunities for foraging. Our 18-year mark-recapture dataset (> 1,200 snakes, > 2,400 captures) reveals significant divergence among populations in life-history traits. Survival rates and population densities were similar among sites, but snakes at the most wind-exposed site (Anse Vata) exhibited lower body condition, slower growth, less frequent production of litters, and smaller litters. Weather-driven variation in feeding rates thus may affect life-history traits of marine snakes as well as their terrestrial counterparts, but driven by different parameters (e.g., wind exposure rather than variation in temperatures or rainfall). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Frequency-dependent Batesian mimicry maintains colour polymorphism in a sea snake population.
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Shine, Richard, Brown, Gregory P., and Goiran, Claire
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MIMICRY (Biology) , *POISONOUS snakes , *SNAKES , *BLACK people , *SALTWATER fishing - Abstract
Evolutionary theory suggests that polymorphic traits can be maintained within a single population only under specific conditions, such as negative frequency-dependent selection or heterozygote advantage. Non-venomous turtle-headed sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus) living in shallow bays near Noumea in New Caledonia exhibit three colour morphs: black, black-and-white banded, and an intermediate (grey-banded) morph that darkens with age. We recorded morph frequencies during 18 consecutive years of surveys, and found that the numbers of recruits (neonates plus immigrants) belonging to each morph increased in years when that morph was unusually rare in the population, and decreased when that morph was unusually common. Thus, morph frequencies are maintained by negative frequency-dependent selection. We interpret the situation as Batesian mimicry of highly venomous sea snakes (Aipysurus, Hydrophis, Laticauda) that occur in the same bays, and range in colour from black-and-white banded to grey-banded. Consistent with the idea that mimicry may protect snakes from attack by large fish and sea eagles, behavioural studies have shown that smaller fish species in these bays flee from banded snakes but attack black individuals. As predicted by theory, mimetic (banded) morphs are less common than the cryptically-coloured melanic morph. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Increased rates of dispersal of free-ranging cane toads (Rhinella marina) during their global invasion.
- Author
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Shine, Richard, Alford, Ross A., Blennerhasset, Ryan, Brown, Gregory P., DeVore, Jayna L., Ducatez, Simon, Finnerty, Patrick, Greenlees, Matthew, Kaiser, Shannon W., McCann, Samantha, Pettit, Lachlan, Pizzatto, Ligia, Schwarzkopf, Lin, Ward-Fear, Georgia, and Phillips, Benjamin L.
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RHINELLA marina ,MARINAS ,TOADS ,PHILOPATRY - Abstract
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding range edge. How does the dispersal behaviour of individual organisms shift to increase rates of population spread? We collate data from 44 radio-tracking studies (in total, of 650 animals) of cane toads (Rhinella marina) to quantify distances moved per day, and the frequency of displacement in their native range (French Guiana) and two invaded areas (Hawai'i and Australia). We show that toads in their native-range, Hawai'i and eastern Australia are relatively sedentary, while toads dispersing across tropical Australia increased their daily distances travelled from 20 to 200 m per day. That increase reflects an increasing propensity to change diurnal retreat sites every day, as well as to move further during each nocturnal displacement. Daily changes in retreat site evolved earlier than did changes in distances moved per night, indicating a breakdown in philopatry before other movement behaviours were optimised to maximise dispersal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Population dynamics of the sea snake Emydocephalus annulatus (Elapidae, Hydrophiinae).
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Shine, Richard, Brown, Gregory P., and Goiran, Claire
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POPULATION dynamics , *SNAKES , *POPULATION biology , *PREDATION , *WEATHER , *ADULTS - Abstract
For sea snakes as for many types of animals, long-term studies on population biology are rare and hence, we do not understand the degree to which annual variation in population sizes is driven by density-dependent regulation versus by stochastic abiotic factors. We monitored three populations of turtle-headed sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus) in New Caledonia over an 18-year period. Annual recruitment (% change in numbers) showed negative density-dependence: that is, recruitment increased when population densities were low, and decreased when densities were high. Windy weather during winter increased survival of neonates, perhaps by shielding them from predation; but those same weather conditions reduced body condition and the reproductive output of adult snakes. The role for density-dependence in annual dynamics of these populations is consistent with the slow, K-selected life-history attributes of the species; and the influence of weather conditions on reproductive output suggests that females adjust their allocation to reproduction based on food availability during vitellogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Untangling the influence of biotic and abiotic factors on habitat selection by a tropical rodent.
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Ward-Fear, Georgia, Brown, Gregory P., Pearson, David, and Shine, Richard
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FRAGMENTED landscapes , *CLIMATE change , *FLOODPLAINS , *SEX ratio , *WILD horses - Abstract
Understanding how animal populations respond to environmental factors is critical because large-scale environmental processes (e.g., habitat fragmentation, climate change) are impacting ecosystems at unprecedented rates. On an overgrazed floodplain in north-western Australia, a native rodent (Pale Field Rat, Rattus tunneyi) constructs its burrows primarily beneath an invasive tree (Chinee Apple, Ziziphus mauritiana) rather than native trees. The dense thorny foliage of the Chinee Apple may allow high rat densities either because of abiotic effects (shade, in a very hot environment) or biotic processes (protection from trampling and soil compaction by feral horses, and/or predation). To distinguish between these hypotheses, we manipulated Chinee Apple foliage to modify biotic factors (access to horses and predators) but not shade levels. We surveyed the rat population with Elliott traps under treatment and control trees and in the open woodland, in two seasons (the breeding season—January, and the nesting season—May). In the breeding season, we ran giving-up density experiments (GUD) with food trays, to assess the perceived risk of predation by rats across our three treatments. Selective trimming of foliage did not affect thermal regimes underneath the trees but did allow ingress of horses and we observed two collapsed burrows as a consequence (although long term impacts of horses were not measured). The perceived predation risk also increased (GUD values at food trays increased) and was highest in the open woodland. Our manipulation resulted in a shift in rat sex ratios (indicating female preference for breeding under control but not foliage-trimmed trees) and influenced rat behaviour (giving-up densities increased; large dominant males inhabited the control but not treatment trees). Our data suggest that the primary benefit of the Chinee Apple tree to native rodents lies in physical protection from predators and (potentially) feral horses, rather than in providing cooler microhabitat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Variation in size and shape of toxin glands among cane toads from native-range and invasive populations.
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Hudson, Cameron M., Brown, Gregory P., Blennerhassett, Ryann A., and Shine, Richard
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DIMORPHISM (Biology) , *CANNIBALISM , *PHENOTYPIC plasticity , *TOXINS , *HERITABILITY - Abstract
If optimal investment in anti-predator defences depends on predation risk, invading new regions (and thus, encountering different predators) may favour shifts in that investment. Cane toads offer an ideal system to test this prediction: expensive anti-predator toxins are stored mainly in parotoid glands whose dimensions are easy to measure, and toad invasions have changed the suites of predators they encounter. Although plasticity may influence parotoid morphology, comparisons between parents and progeny revealed that gland dimensions were highly heritable. That heritability supports the plausibility of an evolved basis to variation in gland dimensions. Measurements of 3779 adult toads show that females have larger glands than males, invasive populations have larger glands than in the native-range, and that parotoid sexual size dimorphism varies strongly among invaded areas. Geographic variation in parotoid morphology may be driven by predation risk to both adult toads and offspring (provisioned with toxins by their mother), with toxins allocated to eggs exacerbating the risk of cannibalism but reducing the risk of interspecific predation. Investment into chemical defences has evolved rapidly during the cane toad's international diaspora, consistent with the hypothesis that organisms flexibly adjust resource allocation to anti-predator tactics in response to novel challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Life history traits of the sea snake Emydocephalus annulatus, based on a 17-yr study.
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Shine, Richard, Shine, Terri G., Brown, Gregory P., and Goiran, Claire
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LIFE history theory ,MARITIME history ,SNAKES ,CORAL reefs & islands ,CORAL reef restoration - Abstract
Although sea snakes are important predators in coral reef ecosystems and have undergone substantial population declines in some areas, we have little robust information on life histories of these animals. Based on a 17-yr mark–recapture study of turtle-headed sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus) in New Caledonia (> 1200 individuals marked), we can confidently allocate ages to 539 individuals (1–11 yr of age). Using data for those snakes, we describe patterns of growth and reproduction. Using the entire data set, we also estimate annual rates of survival. One to three large offspring (300 mm snout–vent length [SVL]) are born after a prolonged (8-month) gestation. The young snakes grow rapidly until they are about 2 yr old (500 mm SVL), after which growth slows, especially in males. Most females begin reproducing at 3 yr of age, and they produce a litter (typically of two offspring) in about 2 out of every 3 or 4 yr thereafter. Annual survival rates are around 70%, but some individuals live for more than a decade. Overall, the life history of this species involves rapid growth and early maturation, followed by low but sustained reproductive output. Despite their relatively recent evolutionary origin, hydrophiine sea snakes are remarkably diverse in life histories as well as in morphologies and diets. Hence, even closely related taxa may differ substantially in their vulnerability to threatening processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Colonization history affects heating rates of invasive cane toads.
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Kosmala, Georgia K., Brown, Gregory P., and Shine, Richard
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RHINELLA marina , *INTRODUCED species , *EFFECT of temperature on amphibians , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Amphibians in hot climates may be able to avoid high temperatures by controlling their rates of heating. In northern Australia, invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) experience hot dry conditions in newly-colonized (western) sites but milder conditions in longer-occupied (eastern) sites. Under standardized conditions, toads from western sites heated less rapidly than did conspecifics from an eastern site. The availability of free water slowed heating rates of eastern but not western toads. Thus, the colonization of climatically extreme sites has been accompanied by a rapid shift in the toads' ability to remain cool under hot conditions, even when free water is not available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. The behaviour of sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus) shifts with the tides.
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Goiran, Claire, Brown, Gregory P., and Shine, Richard
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SEA snakes , *MARINE animals , *BIG data , *HABITATS - Abstract
Tidal cycles are known to affect the ecology of many marine animals, but logistical obstacles have discouraged behavioural studies on sea snakes in the wild. Here, we analyse a large dataset (1,445 observations of 126 individuals) to explore tidally-driven shifts in the behaviour of free-ranging turtle-headed sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus, Hydrophiinae) in the Baie des Citrons, New Caledonia. Snakes tended to move into newly-inundated areas with the rising tide, and became more active (e.g. switched from inactivity to mate-searching and courting) as water levels rose. However, the relative use of alternative habitat types was largely unaffected by tidal phase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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11. Using a natural population collapse of an invasive species to assess the benefits of invader control for native species.
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Brown, Gregory P. and Shine, Richard
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Efforts to control invasive species often assume that suppressing invader abundance will benefit impacted native species, but that assumption may sometimes be in error. In some systems, reducing invader abundance may have little effect. At our study site in tropical Australia, numbers of invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) declined 98% over a 27-month period post-invasion, but none of the 19 native species we monitored increased in counts during that period. Because cane toads impact native fauna primarily via rapid extirpation of top-predators, subsequent reduction in invader abundance may confer little immediate benefit. Short-term culling of cane toads in already-colonised areas is likely to be less beneficial to native species than preventing the spread of cane toads to new areas, or buffering the initial impact of toad arrival through Conditioned Taste Aversion training of vulnerable taxa. More generally, exploiting natural declines in invader populations as a proxy for eradication measures provides a low-cost opportunity to assess the potential for native fauna to passively recover over the short-term. Monitoring native fauna during periods of invader decline can tell us whether or not invader control is likely to confer short-term benefits for native fauna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Cognitive Therapy for Suicidal Older Adults.
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Gallagher-Thompson, Dolores, Steffen, Ann M., Thompson, Larry W., Brown, Gregory K., Brown, Lisa M., Bhar, Sunil S., and Beck, Aaron T.
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Suicide among older adults is a major public health problem. In 2004, there were approximately 5,198 suicides among those 65 and older in the United States according to the National Center for Health Statistics of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, n.d.). The rate of suicide for adults over the age of 65 was 14.3 per 100,000 and this rate increases with age. Moreover, men over the age of 65 are especially at risk for suicide given the suicide rate of 30.0 per 100,000. Given the high rates of suicide among older adults, there is an urgent need to identify the risk and protective factors associated with suicide behavior in this population. The design of effective suicide prevention strategies for older adults hinges on the identification of specific, modifiable risk factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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13. Influence of lung parasites on the growth rates of free-ranging and captive adult cane toads.
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Kelehear, Crystal, Brown, Gregory P., and Shine, Richard
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RHINELLA marina , *LUNGWORMS , *HOST-parasite relationships , *INTRODUCED species , *ANIMAL populations , *BIOLOGICAL pest control agents - Abstract
Many parasites affect the viability of their hosts, but detailed studies combining empirical data from both the field and the laboratory are limited. Consequently, the nature and magnitude of such effects are poorly known for many important host-parasite systems, including macroparasites of amphibians. We examined the effects of lungworm ( Rhabdias pseudosphaerocephala) infections in cane toads ( Bufo marinus) within their invasive Australian range. The host-specificity of this parasite suggests that it might serve as a biological control agent for toads in Australia, if infection proves to reduce toad viability. Mark-recapture studies in the field (near Darwin, Northern Territory) revealed lowered growth rates in infected adult toads when compared to uninfected toads, and a laboratory experiment confirmed causality: experimental infection with R. pseudosphaerocephala reduce toad growth rates. In combination with previous work on the current host-parasite system, it is now evident that nematode lungworms reduce the viability of both newly metamorphosed and adult cane toads, and do so in the field as well as in the laboratory. Rhabdias pseudosphaerocephala may be a valuable component of a biological control strategy for cane toads in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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14. Immunohistochemistry and Radioimmunoassay of Brain Amines.
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Boulton, Alan A., Baker, Glen B., Baker, Judith M., Brown, Gregory M., and Grota, Lee J.
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Immunologic techniques are being used extensively in investigation of brain transmitters and there are prospects for significant advances in the the use of this approach. A variety of techniques has been developed for production of antisera with characteristics that make them suitable for use in radioimmunoassay or in immunohistochemistry For radioimmunoassay, it is desirable that the antiserum have a high degree of specificity for the substance itself or for a derivative that can be formed readily For immunohistochemistry in fixed tissue, it is necessary that the antiserum recognize the substance fixed to tissue proteins. Radioimmunoassays have been developed for several of the amine neurotransmitters and their derivatives. For the most part, these assays have been applied to these substances in the circulation As yet, the application of radioimmunoassays to the examination of brain tissue has been limited Immunohistochemistry has been applied widely to the examination of indoleamines in brain tissue, with much less work being done on the catecholamines and on other substances [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
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15. Rain, prey and predators: climatically driven shifts in frog abundance modify reproductive allometry in a tropical snake.
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Brown, Gregory P. and Shine, Richard
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CLIMATE change , *SNAKES , *ANIMAL populations , *PREDATORY animals , *ALLOMETRY , *REPTILES - Abstract
To predict the impacts of climate change on animal populations, we need long-term data sets on the effects of annual climatic variation on the demographic traits (growth, survival, reproductive output) that determine population viability. One frequent complication is that fecundity also depends upon maternal body size, a trait that often spans a wide range within a single population. During an eight-year field study, we measured annual variation in weather conditions, frog abundance and snake reproduction on a floodplain in the Australian wet-dry tropics. Frog numbers varied considerably from year to year, and were highest in years with hotter wetter conditions during the monsoonal season (“wet season”). Mean maternal body sizes, egg sizes and post-partum maternal body conditions of frog-eating snakes (keelback, Tropidonophis mairii, Colubridae) showed no significant annual variation over this period, but mean clutch sizes were higher in years with higher prey abundance. Larger females were more sensitive to frog abundance in this respect than were smaller conspecifics, so that the rate at which fecundity increased with body size varied among years, and was highest when prey availability was greatest. Thus, the link between female body size and reproductive output varied among years, with climatic factors modifying the relative reproductive rates of larger (older) versus smaller (younger) animals within the keelback population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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16. Spinal arthritis in invasive cane toads is linked to rate of dispersal as well as to latitude.
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Brown, Gregory P., Schwarzkopf, Lin, Alford, Ross A., Bower, Deborah, and Shine, Richard
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RHINELLA marina , *SPONDYLOSIS , *SPINE diseases , *SOIL microbiology , *BRUCELLA - Abstract
Initial research on the spread of cane toads (Rhinella marina) through tropical Australia reported a high incidence of spinal arthritis (spondylosis) in toads at the invasion front (where toads disperse rapidly), but not in areas colonized earlier (where toads are more sedentary). The idea that spondylosis was a cost of rapid dispersal was challenged by wider spatial sampling which linked rates of spondylosis to hot (tropical) climates rather than to dispersal rates. Here, the authors of these competing interpretations collaborate to reinterpret the data. Our reanalysis supports both previous hypotheses; rates of spondylosis are higher in populations established by fast-dispersing toads, and are higher in tropical than in temperate environments; they are also higher in larger toads. The functional reason for climatic effects is unclear, but might involve effects on the soil-living bacteria involved in the induction of spondylosis; and/or may reflect higher movement (as opposed to dispersal) or more pronounced dry-season aggregation rates of toads in tropical conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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17. Invasion and the evolution of speed in toads.
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Phillips, Benjamin L., Brown, Gregory P., Webb, Jonathan K., and Shine, Richard
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TOADS , *INSECT pest control , *SUGARCANE , *BIOTIC communities , *SPECIES , *ANIMAL dispersal - Abstract
Cane toads (Bufo marinus) are large anurans (weighing up to 2 kg) that were introduced to Australia 70 years ago to control insect pests in sugar-cane fields. But the result has been disastrous because the toads are toxic and highly invasive. Here we show that the annual rate of progress of the toad invasion front has increased about fivefold since the toads first arrived; we find that toads with longer legs can not only move faster and are the first to arrive in new areas, but also that those at the front have longer legs than toads in older (long-established) populations. The disaster looks set to turn into an ecological nightmare because of the negative effects invasive species can have on native ecosystems; over many generations, rates of invasion will be accelerated owing to rapid adaptive change in the invader, with continual ‘spatial selection’ at the expanding front favouring traits that increase the toads' dispersal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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