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The cane toad spreads diseases, such as salmonella, and produces highly toxic venom from glands in its skin.
The cane toad spreads diseases, such as salmonella, and produces highly toxic venom from glands in its skin.
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SYDNEY — For decades, the poisonous cane toad has plagued Australians, breeding rapidly, eating voraciously and bestowing death upon most animals that dare consume it.

So officials came up with a novel — and, some say, poetic — solution: Hold a festive mass killing of the creatures and turn the corpses into fertilizer for the very farmers who’ve battled the imported, invasive pests for years.

On Saturday, residents of five communities in cane-toad-plagued northern Queensland state will grab their flashlights and fan out into the night to hunt down the hated animals as part of the inaugural “Toad Day Out” celebration. The toads will be brought to collection points the next morning to be weighed and killed, with some of the remains ground into fertilizer for sugar-cane farmers.

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