Are we winning the war on cane toads?

Are we winning the war on cane toads?

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Tom Gurn,  Particle,  2025.

In 1935, a species known as the giant neotropical toad (Rhinella marina) was introduced to Australia. Scientists hoped these amphibians would control native cane beetles, but cane toads quickly colonised the country and had no discernible impact on beetle populations. Many different methods are being tested to remove these warty beasts, including a toad containment zone and turning the toads into sausages. Now, almost a century later, scientists believe they have finally stumbled across a potential solution to one of the worst invasive species ever. Will clever gene-editing techniques finally rid this continent of the dreaded cane toad?

Professor Emeritus Rick Shine led the team behind the new idea, based on CRISPR gene-editing techniques. “We seem to have found a chink in the toads’ armour,” says Rick. “If we could only stop their metamorphosing, we could have these eternal tadpoles,” he says. Searching for collaborators to test this cunning plan, Rick happened across molecular biologist Dr Maciej Masielko, who was immediately struck by the beauty of the idea. “We know enough about the biochemistry of metamorphosis to know what we would need to do,” says Maciej. “Like using CRISPR-Cas9 to delete a part of the cane toad’s DNA.”