A new study comparing invasive cane toads in Japan and Australia has found substantial changes in body size and shape have ...
Giant invasive toads in Japan are rapidly getting bigger and scientists don’t know why - Researchers say findings challenge ...
Some animal adaptations look like they were designed by a committee of mad scientists. The greater short-horned lizard ...
South American cane toads were brought to Australia in 1935 to help eradicate native beetles that were destroying sugar cane crops. The toads didn’t care much for the beetles, but they did spread ...
Shane traces how cane toads conquered Australia — and how science is turning the tide. Shane Campbell-Staton joins biologist Rick Shine and toad buster Simon Middap to unpack the full story of ...
Kyoto, Japan -- In 1978, cane toads, which are native to South and Central America, were introduced for pest control to Ishigaki island in Okinawa prefecture in Japan. These poisonous toads secrete ...
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