Tony Armstrong discusses why cane toads are considered an invasive species in Australia. In this video, he visits a group of ...
Cane toads might look like a tasty snack to crocodiles, but they have a habit of poisoning their predators. Imported from South America in the 1930s, these pests have left a trail of native animal ...
They are taking part in the Great Cane Toad Bust, an annual attempt to keep a lid on the population of these invasive, toxic amphibians. Toads thus caught will be killed humanely by being chilled ...
The main challenge with eating cane toads is the risk of bufotoxin ... like Japan’s fugu system of safely processing the tetrodotoxin poison from puffer fish, could help to create an export ...
Cane toads have toxic skin that poisons native predators ... like Japan's fugu system of safely processing the tetrodotoxin poison from puffer fish, could help to create an export market for ...
“Magpies eat cane toads and the French eat frog legs ... given scientists had ruled out being able to remove the poison in the toad for human consumption, the meal instead would consist of ...
Poisonous invasive species don’t deter the hungry Australian bluetongue lizard. A new paper in the American Naturalist found that the native lizards that eat toxic mother-of-millions plants are ...