Ecological immunization: In situ training of free-ranging predatory lizards reduces their vulnerability to invasive toxic prey

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Abstract

In Australia, large native predators are fatally poisoned when they ingest invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina). As a result, the spread of cane toads has caused catastrophic population declines in these predators. Immediately prior to the arrival of toads at a floodplain in the Kimberley region,we induced conditioned taste aversion in free-ranging varanid lizards (Varanus panoptes), by offering them small cane toads. By the end of the 18-month study, only one of 31 untrained lizards had survived longer than 110 days, compared to more than half (nine of 16) of trained lizards; the maximum known survival of a trained lizard in the presence of toads was 482 days. In situ aversion training (releasing small toads in advance of the main invasion front) offers a logistically simple and feasible way to buffer the impact of invasive toads on apex predators.

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Ward-Fear, G., Pearson, D. J., Brown, G. P., Rangers, B., & Shine, R. (2016). Ecological immunization: In situ training of free-ranging predatory lizards reduces their vulnerability to invasive toxic prey. Biology Letters, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2015.0863

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