Toxic Toad Eaters Reveal How Evolution Repeats Itself

Bufos marinus, invasive species extraordinaire and one helluva toxic toad. Photo by Chris Ison
Invasive species extraordinaire and one helluva toxic toad. Photo by Chris Ison

At the time, it seemed like the logical thing to do. Australian farmers were desperate. It was the 1930s, and beetles were tearing through their crops, especially sugar cane. Word spread of a toad that loved to gorge itself on the problem pests, which had been successfully brought to Hawaii to manage beetles in sugarcane fields. The Australians could have turned to pesticides, sure, but pesticides are expensive and often harmful to people and the environment. And if the toad could be introduced once, why not again? Why shouldn’t they fix their bug problem once and for all with a harmless little amphibian? So in 1935, two suitcases of cane toads (Rhinella marina; formerly Bufo marinus) arrived in Australia.

Those toads would go on to produce more than 1.5 billion descendants, contending for the title of worst invasive species in history. Continue reading “Toxic Toad Eaters Reveal How Evolution Repeats Itself”