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1. Cutaneous shedding in amphibians causes shifts in bacterial microbiomes.

2. Is developmental plasticity triggered by DNA methylation changes in the invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina)?

3. Divergence in host–parasite interactions during the cane toad's invasion of Australia.

4. Host defense or parasite cue: Skin secretions mediate interactions between amphibians and their parasites.

5. Anthropogenically modified habitats favor bigger and bolder lizards.

6. Skin resistance to water gain and loss has changed in cane toads (Rhinella marina) during their Australian invasion.

7. A famous failure: Why were cane toads an ineffective biocontrol in Australia?

9. Immune and environment‐driven gene expression during invasion: An eco‐immunological application of RNA‐Seq.

10. Dehydration enhances innate immunity in a semiaquatic snake from the wet‐dry tropics.

11. The thermal dependency of locomotor performance evolves rapidly within an invasive species.

12. Invasion history alters the behavioural consequences of immune system activation in cane toads.

13. Survival of the feces: Does a nematode lungworm adaptively manipulate the behavior of its cane toad host?

14. Immune configuration in hatchling snakes is affected by incubation moisture, and is linked to subsequent growth and survival in the field.

15. The costs of parasite infection: Effects of removing lungworms on performance, growth and survival of free‐ranging cane toads.

16. An invasive tree facilitates the persistence of native rodents on an over-grazed floodplain in tropical Australia.

17. Biotic interactions mediate the influence of bird colonies on vegetation and soil chemistry at aggregation sites.

18. Effects of intense wildfires on the nesting ecology of oviparous montane lizards.

19. Frogs in the spotlight: a 16‐year survey of native frogs and invasive toads on a floodplain in tropical Australia.

20. Sex and age differences in habitat use by invasive cane toads ( R hinella marina) and a native anuran ( C yclorana australis) in the Australian wet-dry tropics.

21. High infection intensities, but negligible fitness costs, suggest tolerance of gastrointestinal nematodes in a tropical snake.

22. Directional dispersal has not evolved during the cane toad invasion.

23. Invader immunology: invasion history alters immune system function in cane toads ( Rhinella marina) in tropical Australia.

24. Behavioural responses of reptile predators to invasive cane toads in tropical Australia.

25. The effects of weather conditions on dispersal behaviour of free-ranging lizards ( Tiliqua, Scincidae) in tropical Australia.

26. Effects of an invasive species on refuge-site selection by native fauna: The impact of cane toads on native frogs in the Australian tropics.

27. Interacting biocontrol programmes: invasive cane toads reduce rates of breakdown of cowpats by dung beetles.

28. Invasive parasites in multiple invasive hosts: the arrival of a new host revives a stalled prior parasite invasion.

29. Spatial ecology of bluetongue lizards ( Tiliqua spp.) in the Australian wet-dry tropics.

30. The early toad gets the worm: cane toads at an invasion front benefit from higher prey availability.

31. Invader impact clarifies the roles of top-down and bottom-up effects on tropical snake populations.

32. Identifying optimal barriers to halt the invasion of cane toads Rhinella marina in arid Australia.

33. Rapid evolution of parasite life history traits on an expanding range-edge.

34. Effects of seasonal aridity on the ecology and behaviour of invasive cane toads in the Australian wet-dry tropics.

36. The ecological impact of invasive cane toads on tropical snakes: Field data do not support laboratory-based predictions.

37. Life-history evolution in range-shifting populations.

38. Using a native predator (the meat ant, Iridomyrmex reburrus) to reduce the abundance of an invasive species (the cane toad, Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia.

39. Parasites and pathogens lag behind their host during periods of host range advance.

40. Maladaptive traits in invasive species: in Australia, cane toads are more vulnerable to predatory ants than are native frogs.

41. A native dasyurid predator (common planigale, Planigale maculata) rapidly learns to avoid a toxic invader.

42. The spatial ecology of cane toads ( Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia: Why do metamorph toads stay near the water?

43. Do invasive cane toads ( Chaunus marinus) compete with Australian frogs ( Cyclorana australis)?

44. Rapid expansion of the cane toad ( Bufo marinus) invasion front in tropical Australia.

45. The re-establishment of Andrea (Bromeliaceae: Bromelioideae), a monotypic genus from Southeastern Brazil threatened with extinction.

46. Sexual abstinence and the cost of reproduction in adult male water snakes, Nerodia sipedon.

47. Assessing the Potential Impact of Cane Toads on Australian Snakes.

49. THERMAL ECOLOGY AND SEXUAL SIZE DIMORPHISM IN NORTHERN WATER SNAKES, NERODIA SIPEDON.

50. Characterization of tri- and tetranucleotide microsatellite loci for the slatey-grey snake ( Stegonotus cucullatus, Colubridae).

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