Our best hope of developing innovative methods to combat invasive species is likely to come from the study of high-profile invaders that have attracted intensive research not only into control, but also basic biology. Here we illustrate that point by reviewing current thinking about novel ways to control one of the world’s most well-studied invasions: that of the cane toad in Australia. Recently developed methods for population suppression include more effective traps based on the toad’s acoustic and pheromonal biology. New tools for containing spread include surveillance technologies (e.g., eDNA sampling and automated call detectors), as well as landscape-level barriers that exploit the toad’s vulnerability to desiccation— a strategy that ...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
Invasive species management is a critical issue worldwide, but mitigation strategies are slow to dev...
© 2018 Dr Ella KellyGlobal biodiversity is declining at an unprecedented rate. Within declining popu...
Our best hope of developing innovative methods to combat invasive species is likely to come from the...
Our best hope of developing innovative methods to combat invasive species is likely to come from the...
© 2017 by The University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved. Our best hope of developing innovati...
Cane toads, Rhinella marina, were brought to Australia in 1935. The toads spread rapidly, and curren...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
The marine toad Bufo marinus is native to northern South America, parts of Central America and South...
If invasive species use chemical weapons to suppress the viability of conspecifics, we may be able t...
Invasive species are of major concern to ecologists, because of their impacts on native fauna, commu...
© 2015 The Authors. Biological invasions often occur through expansion of satellite populations that...
Cane toads (Rhinella marina) are a significant ecological problem, but there are, as yet, no effecti...
Management of invasive vertebrates is a crucial component of conservation. Management strategies sho...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
Invasive species management is a critical issue worldwide, but mitigation strategies are slow to dev...
© 2018 Dr Ella KellyGlobal biodiversity is declining at an unprecedented rate. Within declining popu...
Our best hope of developing innovative methods to combat invasive species is likely to come from the...
Our best hope of developing innovative methods to combat invasive species is likely to come from the...
© 2017 by The University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved. Our best hope of developing innovati...
Cane toads, Rhinella marina, were brought to Australia in 1935. The toads spread rapidly, and curren...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
The marine toad Bufo marinus is native to northern South America, parts of Central America and South...
If invasive species use chemical weapons to suppress the viability of conspecifics, we may be able t...
Invasive species are of major concern to ecologists, because of their impacts on native fauna, commu...
© 2015 The Authors. Biological invasions often occur through expansion of satellite populations that...
Cane toads (Rhinella marina) are a significant ecological problem, but there are, as yet, no effecti...
Management of invasive vertebrates is a crucial component of conservation. Management strategies sho...
Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) are invasive pests in many parts of the world, including the Japanese i...
Invasive species management is a critical issue worldwide, but mitigation strategies are slow to dev...
© 2018 Dr Ella KellyGlobal biodiversity is declining at an unprecedented rate. Within declining popu...