SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
Toadzilla stalks no longer. The cane toad is considered a national menace in Australia, even more than tourists from New Zealand. Cane toads were brought to Australia in the 1930s to combat invasive sugar cane beetles, but they often killed the predators who bit into the toad's highly poisonous skin glands. Cane toads don't have to snarl or bite. They just let a snake or a rat try to bite them, get a mouthful of poison. Classic passive-aggressive behavior, isn't it? Cane toads have been implicated in the decline of several native species in Australia, which is believed to now have 200 million of the amphibians - 200 million less one.
Park ranger Kylee Gray stumbled across what may be the largest toad ever recorded, 5.95 pounds. It was quickly dubbed Toadzilla, placed in a container and dispatched. The toad's brown, warty body will be donated to the Queensland Museum so schoolchildren can see it and go, ew, cool.
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