iHerp Australia Issue 11 | Page 5

But the more time I have spent studying Cane Toads, the less that attitude has made sense to me. If you think about it, blaming the toad for the ecological havoc it has inflicted is desperately unfair. First, the Cane Toad didn’t choose to come to Australia - people brought it here. Second, the main ecological impact of the toad comes from self-defence - it fatally poisons animals that try to eat it. Frankly, I’d retaliate ‘Should we SLAUGHTER EVERY Cane Toad we see? If so, WHY , and HOW should we do it?’ too if you tried to eat me. And third, recent research is showing that the ecological impact of Cane Toads over most of their range - that is, in places where they have already been present for a few decades - is much less severe than most people think. send that toad in the backyard to the big swamp in the sky, exactly how should we do it? Fortunately, research has given us a solid basis from which to consider those questions. My own conclusion is that it makes sense to kill Cane Toads only in situations where removing them is likely to reduce the species’ spread to new areas, or to decrease their impact on native wildlife. And when we need to kill Cane Toads, I think that we should do so as ethically and humanely as if we were culling Koalas. How did I come to this very un-Australian perspec- tive? My recent book Cane Toad Wars tells the story of my conversion from toad-hater to toad-admirer, and you can get the whole story there. But for a quick snapshot, the easiest way to explain my change of heart is to examine some of the things that we have learned about Cane Toads over the last few years. I’ll review our research results concerning two topics. Left: after years of studying Cane Toads, biologist Rick Shine is questioning Aussie attitudes to this much-detested invader. Rick is the one on the left. Image by Terri Shine. So I reckon it’s time for Australian animal-lovers to Above: “toad-busting” is a popular sport across much of stop, take a deep breath, and give some serious Australia, giving people a chance to hunt down the alien thought to the matter. Should we slaughter every amphibians. This photo by Reid Tingley shows fellow scientist Cane Toad we see? If so, why? And if we do decide to Matt Greenlees with two handfuls of squirming prey.