Pesticide use is linked to increased body size in a large mammalian carnivore

Author:

Letnic M12,Crowther M S3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecosystem Science, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia

2. Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia

3. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Pollution and pesticide use have been linked to evolution of chemical resistance and phenotypic shifts in invertebrates, but less so in vertebrates. Here we provide evidence that poisoning directed towards a mammalian carnivore, the dingo (Canis dingo), is linked to an increase in dingo body mass. We compared the skull length of dingoes, a proxy for size, from three regions where dingo populations were controlled by distributing poisoned meat baits and an unbaited region, before and after the introduction of the toxin sodium fluoroacetate (Compound 1080). Following 1080 introduction, dingo skull length increased in baited regions but not in the unbaited region. We estimate that after 1080 introduction, the skull length of female and male dingoes in baited regions increased by 4.49 and 3.6 mm, respectively. This equates to a 1.02- and 0.86-kg increase in mean body masses of female and male dingoes, respectively. We hypothesize that dingo body size has increased in baited regions due to 1080 selecting for animals with larger body size or because a reduction in dingo abundance in baited areas may have removed constraints on growth imposed by intraspecific competition and prey availability. Our study provides evidence that pesticide use can prompt phenotypic change in comparatively large and long-lived large vertebrates.

Funder

Australia and Pacific Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference41 articles.

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2. Baiting trials for dingoes in Central Australia, with poison ‘1080’, encapsulated strychnine, and strychnine suspended in methyl cellulose;Best;CSIRO Australian Division of Wildlife Research Technical Paper,1974

3. Can intraspecific competition drive disruptive selection? An experimental test in natural populations of sticklebacks;Bolnick;Evolution,2004

4. Geographic hot spots of dingo genetic ancestry in southeastern Australia despite hybridisation with domestic dogs;Cairns;Conservation Genetics,2020

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