Cane Toads

A Tale of Sugar, Politics and Flawed Science

Nigel Turvey author Fiona Probyn-Rapsey editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Sydney University Press

Published:11th Oct '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Cane Toads cover

Cane Toads follows the story of toads from their use as agents of biological control, to becoming one of the world's most invasive species.

Cane Toads is about good intentions, unintended consequences and of simple acts leading to catastrophic outcomes. It is about scientists so committed to solving a problem, serving their country, their leaders and the industry that employed them, that they are blinkered to adverse impacts.

Before the birth of modern insecticides, farmers and gardeners used predatory and parasitic wasps and flies, insect-eating birds, lizards and toads as agents of biological control. In the late 19th century sugar cane scientists carried cane toads from Barbados to Puerto Rico, to Hawai'i and then Queensland to control pests. Toads were introduced to some 138 countries, and are now ranked among the world's most invasive species.

Queensland's sugar scientists released the toad into cane fields in 1935. They were supported by cane growers, politicians, the nation's leading scientists, the premier of Queensland and the prime minister of Australia. Only a lone voice objected. In the following 70 years they spread as far as western NSW and Western Australia.

This story is about good intentions and unintended catastrophic consequences. It is about scientists so committed to solving a problem, serving their country, their leaders and the industry that employed them, that they are blinkered to adverse impacts. There are lessons to learn from the toad's tale. And as the tale shows, we still come perilously close to repeating the mistakes of the past.

'Turvey provides useful historical context for the decision to introduce
the cane toad into Australia and tells the story of its progressive
invasion of the country.'

-- Alison Haynes * Austral Ecology *

'The richness of the scholarship of this engaging work comes from its traversing of the disciplinary divide, in much the same way the cane toad ignored the boundaries of the canefields of Queensland in the 1930s. Nigel Turvey offers us a biography of Bufo marinus, how it has come to be among us and the problem of the seemingly unending march – or colonisation – of the cane toad across northern Australia.'

-- Barney Glover * Australian Forest Grow

ISBN: 9781743323595

Dimensions: 210mm x 148mm x 15mm

Weight: 360g

218 pages