Cane toads (Bufo marinus) are now moving about 5 times faster through tropical Australia than they did a half-century ago, during the early phases of toad invasion. Radio-tracking has revealed higher daily rates of displacement by toads at the invasion front compared to those from long-colonised areas: toads from frontal populations follow straighter paths, move more often, and move further per displacement than do toads from older (long-established) populations. Are these higher movement rates of invasion-front toads associated with modified locomotor performance (e.g. speed, endurance)? In an outdoor raceway, toads collected from the invasion front had similar speeds, but threefold greater endurance, compared to conspecifics collected f...
As a population expands into novel areas (as occurs in biological invasions), the range edge becomes...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range ex...
Biological invasions can stimulate rapid shifts in organismal performance, via both plasticity and a...
During a biological invasion, we expect that the expanding front will increasingly become dominated ...
As is common in biological invasions, the rate at which cane toads (Rhinella marina) have spread acr...
Invasive species provide a robust opportunity to evaluate how animals deal with novel environmental ...
Summary Many invasive species have evolved behavioural and morphological characteristics that facili...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
Evolutionary theory predicts that individuals at an expanding range edge will disperse faster than c...
To predict the spread of invasive species, we need to understand the mechanisms that underlie their ...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
Dispersal biology at an invasion front differs from that of populations within the range core, becau...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates and causing species' ranges to shift. Range expa...
As a population expands into novel areas (as occurs in biological invasions), the range edge becomes...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range ex...
Biological invasions can stimulate rapid shifts in organismal performance, via both plasticity and a...
During a biological invasion, we expect that the expanding front will increasingly become dominated ...
As is common in biological invasions, the rate at which cane toads (Rhinella marina) have spread acr...
Invasive species provide a robust opportunity to evaluate how animals deal with novel environmental ...
Summary Many invasive species have evolved behavioural and morphological characteristics that facili...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
Evolutionary theory predicts that individuals at an expanding range edge will disperse faster than c...
To predict the spread of invasive species, we need to understand the mechanisms that underlie their ...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
Dispersal biology at an invasion front differs from that of populations within the range core, becau...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates and causing species' ranges to shift. Range expa...
As a population expands into novel areas (as occurs in biological invasions), the range edge becomes...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range ex...
Biological invasions can stimulate rapid shifts in organismal performance, via both plasticity and a...