Tom McKay, Gizmodo, 12/31/18
Are these
invasive cane toads waterlogged, or just really, really thirsty? The below
photo, captured by one Andrew Mock of Kununurra in northern Australia, shows 10
cane toads riding out a storm that dumped nearly 70mm of rain by hitching
themselves to the back of an approximately 3.5-meter python, the
Guardian reported on Monday, though it seems as though their primary
motivation may have been humping it.
68mm just
fell in the last hour at Kununurra. Flushed all the cane toads out of my
brothers dam. Some of them took the easy way out - hitching a ride on the
back of a 3.5m python.
The paper
wrote that the bizarre scene was originally discovered by Andrew Mock’s
brother, Paul Mock, after which they quickly took a photo of the
reptilian-amphibian Bang Bus:
Worried the
dam and spillway might break its banks, Paul Mock ventured outside in the
middle of the lightning and rain.
“The lake
was so full it had filled the cane toad burrows around the bank and they were
all sitting on top of the grass – thousands of them,” he told Guardian
Australia.
“[The snake]
was in the middle of the lawn, making for higher ground... He was literally
moving across the grass at full speed with the frogs hanging on.”
According to
Jodi Rowley, the curator of Amphibian & Reptile Conservation Biology at the
Australian Museum, the cane toads in question may have been less interested in
escaping the rainfall than desperately trying to bang the snake.
Cane toads
are not native to Australia, and were introduced to the country in the 1930s in
a misguided attempt to eliminate beetle infestations of sugar cane crops. That
didn’t work, but the toads breed quickly and are highly adaptable, and every
stage of their life cycle from eggs to adulthood are brimming with a potent
venom that “can cause rapid heartbeat, excessive salivation, convulsions and
paralysis and can result in death for many native animals,” according to the
Australian government’s Department
of the Environment and Energy. (The toxin even persists
after death, meaning their corpses can poison carrion-eating animals or
perhaps even ponds and puddles.)
There’s no
way to know for sure, but per the BBC, the
number of the toads across the country is estimated to have perhaps crossed
into the billions:
“They
probably have moved about halfway through that tropical region of Western
Australia,” explained Rick Shine, a professor in biology at the University of
Sydney. “They are in very inaccessible country now in the Kimberley. It is very
hard to get detailed information on exactly where the front is but it seems to
be moving at 50 to 60km (31 to 37 miles) per annum.”
The warty
amphibians move only during the wet season. Although tracking studies have
shown many hop less than 10 metres a day, those at the front line have grown
bigger and faster.
Efforts to
control the toad’s spread have included government-backed elimination campaigns
(though funding
was cut in 2014 as they outpaced the program) as well as air-dropping
sausages of toad meat laced with a nauseating
substance in an attempt to train predators not to eat the toxic toads. According
to the
Conversation, researchers recently
sequenced the species’ genome, which could give conservation authorities
better tools to finally crack down on their invasion of the continent.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!