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Road transect surveys do not reveal any consistent effects of a toxic invasive species on tropical reptiles

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Abstract

Effects of perturbations to wildlife often are measured by changes in rates of encounter with animals during standardised surveys, such as along roads. Previous work has predicted that the invasion of toxic cane toads (Rhinella marina) through the Australian tropics will cause massive mortality of anuran-eating snakes, and influence abundances of other native species. We surveyed three adjacent road transects for nocturnal snakes and lizards, beginning shortly before toads arrived at this site near Darwin, in the Northern Territory. In the wet-seasons of four successive years, we conducted surveys on 591 nights; on 302 of these nights, all three transects were surveyed. We recorded 8,880 live cane toads and 3,365 live reptiles. Toad numbers increased over time on all three transects but encounters with 13 species of native reptiles varied inconsistently. Eight of the 13 species of native reptile showed no significant change in encounter rates following the arrival of toads. Of the five species that did change in encounter rates, only one taxon (the bluetongue skink, Tiliqua scincoides intermedia) declined across all three transects. Encounter rates of the other four species often increased on at least one transect but decreased on at least one other. Thus, either the impact of cane toads on counts of reptiles differed between nearby sites, or (more likely) other factors had more influence on reptile numbers. A consistent decrease in reptile numbers on the busiest road over the study period suggests that local snake populations were affected more by road-kill than by invasive toads. Without spatial replication, this decrease could have been interpreted as an impact of toad invasion.

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Acknowledgments

Many people participated in our surveys over the course of this project; special thanks to R. Somaweera, N. Somaweera, B. Bruning, L. Pizzatto, S. Price-Rees, D. Nelson, M. Crossland, M. Hagman, C. Beckmann, and C. Kelehear. We thank the Northern Territory Department of Lands and Planning (J. De Guzman) and the Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory (D. Lonza and G. Williams) for data on traffic volumes. Our work was funded by the Australian Research Council.

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Correspondence to Richard Shine.

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Brown, G.P., Greenlees, M.J., Phillips, B.L. et al. Road transect surveys do not reveal any consistent effects of a toxic invasive species on tropical reptiles. Biol Invasions 15, 1005–1015 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-012-0346-2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-012-0346-2

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