Responses of Australian wading birds to a novel toxic prey type, the invasive cane toad Rhinella marina

被引:0
|
作者
Christa Beckmann
Michael R. Crossland
Richard Shine
机构
[1] University of Sydney,School of Biological Sciences A08
来源
Biological Invasions | 2011年 / 13卷
关键词
Bufotoxin; Egret; Heron; Metamorph; Swamphen; Tadpole;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The impact of invasive predators on native prey has attracted considerable scientific attention, whereas the reverse situation (invasive species being eaten by native predators) has been less frequently studied. Such interactions might affect invasion success; an invader that is readily consumed by native species may be less likely to flourish in its new range than one that is ignored by those taxa. Invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) in Australia have fatally poisoned many native predators (e.g., marsupials, crocodiles, lizards) that attempt to ingest the toxic anurans, but birds are more resistant to toad toxins. We quantified prey preferences of four species of wading birds (Nankeen night heron, purple swamphen, pied heron, little egret) in the wild, by offering cane toads and alternative native prey items (total of 279 trays offered, 14 different combinations of prey types). All bird species tested preferred the native prey, avoiding both tadpole and metamorph cane toads. Avoidance of toads was strong enough to reduce foraging on native prey presented in combination with the toads, suggesting that the presence of cane toads could affect predator foraging tactics, and reduce the intensity of predation on native prey species found in association with toads.
引用
收藏
页码:2925 / 2934
页数:9
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [1] Responses of Australian wading birds to a novel toxic prey type, the invasive cane toad Rhinella marina
    Beckmann, Christa
    Crossland, Michael R.
    Shine, Richard
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2011, 13 (12) : 2925 - 2934
  • [2] Behavioural responses of an Australian colubrid snake (Dendrelaphis punctulatus) to a novel toxic prey item (the Cane Toad Rhinella marina)
    Llewelyn, John
    Choyce, Neil C.
    Phillips, Benjamin L.
    Webb, Jonathan K.
    Pearson, David J.
    Schwarzkopf, Lin
    Shine, Richard
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2018, 20 (09) : 2507 - 2516
  • [3] Behavioural responses of an Australian colubrid snake (Dendrelaphis punctulatus) to a novel toxic prey item (the Cane Toad Rhinella marina)
    John Llewelyn
    Neil C. Choyce
    Benjamin L. Phillips
    Jonathan K. Webb
    David J. Pearson
    Lin Schwarzkopf
    Richard Shine
    [J]. Biological Invasions, 2018, 20 : 2507 - 2516
  • [4] The impacts of a toxic invasive prey species (the cane toad, Rhinella marina) on a vulnerable predator (the lace monitor, Varanus varius)
    Jolly, Christopher J.
    Shine, Richard
    Greenlees, Matthew J.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2016, 18 (05) : 1499 - 1509
  • [5] The impacts of a toxic invasive prey species (the cane toad, Rhinella marina) on a vulnerable predator (the lace monitor, Varanus varius)
    Christopher J. Jolly
    Richard Shine
    Matthew J. Greenlees
    [J]. Biological Invasions, 2016, 18 : 1499 - 1509
  • [6] Draft genome assembly of the invasive cane toad, Rhinella marina
    Edwards, Richard J.
    Tuipulotu, Daniel Enosi
    Amos, Timothy G.
    O'Meally, Denis
    Richardson, Mark F.
    Russell, Tonia L.
    Vallinoto, Marcelo
    Carneiro, Miguel
    Ferrand, Nuno
    Wilkins, Marc R.
    Sequeira, Fernando
    Rollins, Lee A.
    Holmes, Edward C.
    Shine, Richard
    White, Peter A.
    [J]. GIGASCIENCE, 2018, 7 (09):
  • [7] Rapid adaptation to cold in the invasive cane toad Rhinella marina
    Mittan, Cinnamon S.
    Zamudio, Kelly R.
    [J]. CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY, 2019, 7
  • [8] Viral Discovery in the Invasive Australian Cane Toad (Rhinella marina) Using Metatranscriptomic and Genomic Approaches
    Russo, Alice G.
    Eden, John-Sebastian
    Tuipulotu, Daniel Enosi
    Shi, Mang
    Selechnik, Daniel
    Shine, Richard
    Rollins, Lee Ann
    Holmes, Edward C.
    White, Peter A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2018, 92 (17)
  • [9] Lateralized motor behaviour in the righting responses of the cane toad (Rhinella marina)
    Robins, Andrew
    Rogers, Lesley J.
    [J]. LATERALITY, 2022, 27 (02): : 129 - 171
  • [10] Behaviour and survivorship of a dasyurid predator (Antechinus flavipes) in response to encounters with the toxic and invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina)
    Kaemper, Wiebke
    Webb, Jonathan K.
    Crowther, Mathew S.
    Greenlees, Matthew J.
    Shine, Richard
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN MAMMALOGY, 2013, 35 (02): : 136 - 143