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- Title
The successful elimination of Cane toads, Bufo marinus, from an island with breeding habitat off Bermuda.
- Authors
Wingate, David B.
- Abstract
The 6.5 Ha Nonsuch island nature reserve in Castle harbour, Bermuda, under restoration as a 'Living museum' of Bermuda's pre-colonial terrestrial flora and fauna since 1962, was unexpectedly compromised by the colonization of a manmade freshwater pond by the invasive Cane toad Bufo marinus, which managed to cross a 175 m seawater barrier isolating the island. The toad was considered to pose a threat to the endemic Skink, for which Nonsuch is a key sanctuary, and to the burrow nesting Bermuda petrel or Cahow, which was about to be translocated to that larger island in order to establish a colony safe from the global warming threat of sealevel rise. A non-lethal method of removing the toads was devised through installation of a toad barrier around the freshwater pond, constructed of robust high density polyethylene (HDPE). Toads outside the barrier were no longer able to breed and were captured and removed by night searches over a five year period as they piled up against it. Removal of the breeding population inside the barrier was only possible by capturing all individuals resulting from each spawning before they could reach breeding age. This also took 5 years despite the small size (0.06 Ha) of the pond. A total of 1,244 toads were removed to Bermuda's mainland. As breeding age is attained in 2 years the collection total for the first 2 years provided an approximation of the population density on the island before removal began (~80 per Ha). Although the immigration rate to Nonsuch is estimated to be less than one per year, this still requires maintaining the barrier as a permanent fixture. As future immigrants can be fairly quickly intercepted, the toad is now essentially extaxic on Nonsuch. This is the first published report of a successful eradication of the species from an island with breeding habitat.
- Subjects
NONSUCH Island (Bermuda Islands); BERMUDA Islands; RHINELLA marina; SKINKS; BERMUDA petrel; POLYETHYLENE; PONDS; WILDLIFE conservation; INTRODUCED species prevention
- Publication
Biological Invasions, 2011, Vol 13, Issue 7, p1487
- ISSN
1387-3547
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10530-010-9925-2