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Field trials of chemical suppression of embryonic cane toads (

Authors :
Matthew J. Greenlees
Michael R. Crossland
Richard Shine
Samantha McCann
Source :
Ecology and Evolution, Ecology and Evolution, Vol 10, Iss 18, Pp 10177-10185 (2020)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Laboratory experiments have shown that the viability of embryos of the invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina) can be reduced by exposure to chemical cues from older conspecific larvae. These effects (very strong in laboratory trials) may offer an exciting new approach to controlling this problematic invasive species in Australia. However, the degree to which the method works in natural environments has yet to be assessed.Our experiments in the laboratory and in seminatural outdoor waterbodies show that chemical cues from tadpoles do indeed suppress the growth, development, and survival of conspecific larvae that are exposed as embryos and do so in a dose‐dependent manner; higher tadpole densities cause greater suppression of embryos.In seminatural outdoor waterbodies, suppressor‐exposed tadpoles were less than half as likely to survive to metamorphosis as were controls, and were much smaller when they did so and hence, less likely to survive the metamorph stage. Additionally, female cane toads were less likely to oviposit in a waterbody containing free‐ranging (but not cage‐enclosed) tadpoles, suggesting that the presence of tadpoles (rather than the chemical cues they produce) may discourage oviposition.Broadly, our results suggest that the suppression effect documented in laboratory studies does indeed occur in the field also, and hence that we may be able to translate that approach to develop new and more effective ways to reduce rates of recruitment of peri‐urban populations of cane toads in their invasive range.<br />When cane toad eggs are exposed to cane toad tadpoles during development, the eggs often experience stunted development and do not produce viable tadpoles. While adult toads will avoid laying their eggs in ponds containing toad tadpoles, this behavior does not occur if the tadpoles are contained within a small net. This is encouraging for the control of cane toads in Australia as it suggests that adult toads can be manipulated into laying their eggs into ponds where their clutch will not develop into successful tadpoles.

Details

ISSN :
20457758
Volume :
10
Issue :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology and evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0bf7a3ab600e92457cc3be348ff461ec