THE AGE (Melbourne, Australia) 15 December 09 Cane toad hitchhikes to Melbourne (Michelle Draper)
AAP: A Melbourne teenager with a fondness for frogs got a slimy surprise when a creature he plucked from a palm tree at Kmart turned out to be a dreaded cane toad, sparking a biosecurity alert across the state.
Frog lover Paul O'Neill, 14, was in a hurry to catch his bus when he spotted the mud-covered creature perched on the pot plant, so he simply bundled it up and headed to his home in Hampton, in Melbourne's south.
But as he was washing the "frog" in the sink, he was squirted with venom.
The reptile and amphibian enthusiast, who has about 20 frogs and a carpet python called Mr Dudley, knew immediately he'd found a cane toad.
The destructive toads are rampant across Queensland and have encroached into parts of NSW and the Northern Territory but have so far not settled in Victoria.
Victoria's Department of Primary Industries on Tuesday said it believed this toad had hitched a ride to the Cheltenham store on one of about 7,000 assorted palms delivered to Kmart stores from a Queensland wholesaler.
"I could tell it was a cane toad because it squirted venom on me when I got it home," Paul told AAP on Tuesday.
Paul quickly contacted a ranger when he realised it was a cane toad but said he wasn't disappointed he couldn't keep the latest addition to his frog family.
"I didn't really want to keep it because it was poisonous," he said.
The hitchhiking toad, measuring between five and eight centimetres, was expected to be euthanased later this week.
Paul's discovery sparked a biosecurity alert in Victoria but searches by Kmart staff and Victoria's Department of Primary Industries (DPI) found no trace of other cane toads.
However, about 2,500 palms have been sold by Kmart and Victorians who may have bought any were urged to check for cane toads.
DPI manager of landscape protection Brendan Roughead said there was still a low chance cane toads could establish in Victoria.
"Biologically speaking, Victoria is not a cane toad friendly environment because the climate is too cold," Mr Roughead said in a statement.
"Many species of native frogs are often wrongly identified as cane toads so we are urging people who suspect they have found a cane toad not to hurt it."
People who suspect they have found a cane toad are asked to photograph it and report it to the DPI.
Mr Roughead said people should not handle frogs or toads as they were susceptible to disease after being touched.
The DPI can be contacted on 136 186 and photographs can be emailed to highrisk.invasiveanimals@dpi.vic.gov.au.
Cane toad hitchhikes to Melbourne


