DISCOVERY-ANIMAL PLANET () 15 February 06 Toxic Toads Evolving Super-Fast (Larry O'Hanlon)
Fat, toxic toads at the leading edge of an Australian invasion have evolved longer legs than those behind the front lines, report biologists.
The alarming discovery not only means the toads can spread more quickly over the continent, but it raises the possibility that under the right conditions, animal evolution can happen in just decades, not eons.
That, in turn, has major implications for animals adapting to global warming, as well as biological pest control projects, which generally take for granted that carefully studied animals introduced to fight off invasive species can not evolve into something troublesome.
The inexorable, seven-decade-long expansion of cane toads from their disastrous introduction to Queensland in 1935 has long been monitored by biologists.
One such biologist was recently driving along a toad-crowded road one night, along the invasion front about 40 miles east of Darwin, when he noticed how desperately the toads were hopping grimly toward him, all facing the same way: into virgin territory.
"It was just like an invasion in a science fiction movie," said biologist Richard Shine of the University of Sydney.
Shine is a snake specialist, but when the toads began heading toward his study area, he decided it would be wise to "know thine enemy" before they arrived, he explained.
So for years Shine and his colleagues have been tracking cane toads, and as a matter of course they weigh the toads and measure them. Those records came in handy when they discovered that some cane toads at the invasion front were covering an unprecedented mile-and-a-quarter (two kilometers) each night.
"Sure enough, there was a pattern," said Shine of their astonishing leg-length discovery.
Not only were the legs of pioneer toads significantly longer, but the same athletic build dies out among toads as areas become more settled.
In other words, there appears to be a great advantage to getting the first crack at virgin territory. That boils down to the opportunity to produce more viable tadpoles that grow up to continue the line. For seven decades now that advantage has been awarded to cane toads with the longest legs. That has lead to the steady breeding of longer and longer-legged toads that can keep beating the crowd.
The disheartening result is that the toad invasion rate has increased from seven miles per year in the 1950s to a whopping 30 miles per year today, report Shine and his colleagues in the Feb. 16 edition of Nature.
The silver lining is that the cane toads are showing how quickly some species can adapt to new environments, a challenge now facing innumerable species worldwide as the global climate warms, said ecologist and rapid evolution researcher David Skelly of Yale University.
"We never think of evolutionary changes happening that fast," said Skelly of his fellow ecologists.
That has to change, because the cane toads are just a high profile case of something that is being seen in many organisms all over the planet, he said.
"It doesn't mean that we have no problem (with climate change) or that all species will be viable," said Skelly. But there is evidence that many species might be more able to adapt than previously believed.
Another place where people have to start thinking about rapid evolution is at the federal and state agencies where they evaluate exotic species for release as biological checks on exotic pests, said Skelly.
Right now those agencies don't consider the possibility that a new exotic species will very likely change in its new environment, for better or worse. It's time they started thinking differently, he said.
http://animal.discovery.com/news/briefs/20060213/toad.html
TOWNSVILLE BULLETIN (Australia) 17 February 06 Toads not mutants (Daniel Bateman)
The Northern Territory is for wimps -- North Queenslanders have been battling super-sized cane toads for more than 60 years.
Researchers said this week that the territory was being invaded by mutant cane toads that were five times faster than their predecessors from the 1940s.
James Cook University toad expert Ross Alford, however, said the cane toads were not mutant variants of toads elsewhere in Australia, rather ancestors of the faster, stronger toads normally seen at the front of an invasion, such as those that originated in North Queensland decades ago.
"I'm not sure you can say for sure they are mutants yet," Prof Alford said.
"It would just be the result of 60 years of the bigger, faster toads being the ones that moved the fastest.
"The toads that are all over the place first do tend to leave a lot more offspring than your average toad because there's nothing competing with them and it does take the predators a little while to kind of home in on them.
"And so for the first year or so they are really successful and if that happens over 60 years, you could end up with a bit of a change.
"These are the sprinters -- a long line of athletes in the family, you might say."
The University of Sydney scientists' research found the toads had long, faster legs which made up 45 per cent of their body length.
Prof Alford said this confirmed that bigger toads were at the frontline of the toad invasion.
"Lots of animals' legs just don't grow in proportion, for example you think about humans," he said.
"Children have proportionally really big heads, so as humans get bigger their heads get relatively smaller and similar sorts of things happen with all kinds of body parts.
"It's possible what they're looking at is what we've known for ages, which is just that toads are bigger at the front of the invasion."
Prof Alford said there was an opportunity for evolution within cane toad populations.
"Because there are very large numbers of them, there is more opportunity for evolution because the more animals you've got, the more chance there is to have a few unusual ones survive," he said.
"And it is possible that not just because they are bigger, but because the big ones travel faster and have been at the front of the invasion for 60 years now, that it's been reinforced by genetics."
http://townsvillebulletin.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,7034,18173556%5E14787,00.html