Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.

BELGERI, A. - BAJWA, A.A. - SHABBIR, A - NAVIE, S. - VIVIAN-SMITH, G. - ADKINS, S.

Resumen:

AbstractParthenium weed has been invading native and managed Australian grasslands for almost 40 years. This study quantified the potential of selected plant mixtures to suppress the growth of parthenium weed and followed their response to grazing and their impact upon plant community diversity. The first mixture consisted of predominantly introduced species including Rhodes grass, Bisset bluegrass, butterfly pea and green panic. This mixture produced biomass rapidly and showed tolerance to weed species other than parthenium weed. However, the mixture was unable to suppress the growth of parthenium weed. The second mixture of predominantly native pasture species (including forest bluegrass, Queensland bluegrass, Buffel grass and siratro) produced biomass relatively slowly, but eventually reached the same biomass production as the first mixture 12 weeks after planting. This mixture suppressed parthenium weed re-establishment by 78% compared to the control treatment. Its tolerance to the invasion of other weed species and the maintenance of forage species evenness was also superior. The total diversity was five times higher for the mixture communities as compared to the plant community in the control treatment. Therefore, using the suppressive pasture mixtures may provide an improved sustainable management approach for parthenium weed in grasslands.


Detalles Bibliográficos
2020
INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES
PARTHENIUM WEED
SPECIES DIVERSITY
PASTURES
SUPPRESSIVE PLANTS
Inglés
Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
AINFO
http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=61526&biblioteca=vazio&busca=61526&qFacets=61526
Acceso abierto
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author BELGERI, A.
author2 BAJWA, A.A.
SHABBIR, A
NAVIE, S.
VIVIAN-SMITH, G.
ADKINS, S.
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author_facet BELGERI, A.
BAJWA, A.A.
SHABBIR, A
NAVIE, S.
VIVIAN-SMITH, G.
ADKINS, S.
author_role author
bitstream.checksum.fl_str_mv 903f84fe29797332145eb4c58dc8d4be
bitstream.checksumAlgorithm.fl_str_mv MD5
bitstream.url.fl_str_mv https://redi.anii.org.uy/jspui/bitstream/20.500.12381/1524/1/sword-2022-10-20T22%3a42%3a21.original.xml
collection AINFO
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv BELGERI, A.
BAJWA, A.A.
SHABBIR, A
NAVIE, S.
VIVIAN-SMITH, G.
ADKINS, S.
dc.date.accessioned.none.fl_str_mv 2022-10-21T01:42:21Z
dc.date.available.none.fl_str_mv 2022-10-21T01:42:21Z
dc.date.issued.none.fl_str_mv 2020
dc.date.updated.none.fl_str_mv 2022-10-21T01:42:21Z
dc.description.abstract.none.fl_txt_mv AbstractParthenium weed has been invading native and managed Australian grasslands for almost 40 years. This study quantified the potential of selected plant mixtures to suppress the growth of parthenium weed and followed their response to grazing and their impact upon plant community diversity. The first mixture consisted of predominantly introduced species including Rhodes grass, Bisset bluegrass, butterfly pea and green panic. This mixture produced biomass rapidly and showed tolerance to weed species other than parthenium weed. However, the mixture was unable to suppress the growth of parthenium weed. The second mixture of predominantly native pasture species (including forest bluegrass, Queensland bluegrass, Buffel grass and siratro) produced biomass relatively slowly, but eventually reached the same biomass production as the first mixture 12 weeks after planting. This mixture suppressed parthenium weed re-establishment by 78% compared to the control treatment. Its tolerance to the invasion of other weed species and the maintenance of forage species evenness was also superior. The total diversity was five times higher for the mixture communities as compared to the plant community in the control treatment. Therefore, using the suppressive pasture mixtures may provide an improved sustainable management approach for parthenium weed in grasslands.
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=61526&biblioteca=vazio&busca=61526&qFacets=61526
dc.language.iso.none.fl_str_mv en
eng
dc.rights.es.fl_str_mv Acceso abierto
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:AINFO
instname:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
instacron:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES
PARTHENIUM WEED
SPECIES DIVERSITY
PASTURES
SUPPRESSIVE PLANTS
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Article
PublishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type.version.none.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
description AbstractParthenium weed has been invading native and managed Australian grasslands for almost 40 years. This study quantified the potential of selected plant mixtures to suppress the growth of parthenium weed and followed their response to grazing and their impact upon plant community diversity. The first mixture consisted of predominantly introduced species including Rhodes grass, Bisset bluegrass, butterfly pea and green panic. This mixture produced biomass rapidly and showed tolerance to weed species other than parthenium weed. However, the mixture was unable to suppress the growth of parthenium weed. The second mixture of predominantly native pasture species (including forest bluegrass, Queensland bluegrass, Buffel grass and siratro) produced biomass relatively slowly, but eventually reached the same biomass production as the first mixture 12 weeks after planting. This mixture suppressed parthenium weed re-establishment by 78% compared to the control treatment. Its tolerance to the invasion of other weed species and the maintenance of forage species evenness was also superior. The total diversity was five times higher for the mixture communities as compared to the plant community in the control treatment. Therefore, using the suppressive pasture mixtures may provide an improved sustainable management approach for parthenium weed in grasslands.
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spelling 2022-10-21T01:42:21Z2022-10-21T01:42:21Z20202022-10-21T01:42:21Zhttp://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=61526&biblioteca=vazio&busca=61526&qFacets=61526AbstractParthenium weed has been invading native and managed Australian grasslands for almost 40 years. This study quantified the potential of selected plant mixtures to suppress the growth of parthenium weed and followed their response to grazing and their impact upon plant community diversity. The first mixture consisted of predominantly introduced species including Rhodes grass, Bisset bluegrass, butterfly pea and green panic. This mixture produced biomass rapidly and showed tolerance to weed species other than parthenium weed. However, the mixture was unable to suppress the growth of parthenium weed. The second mixture of predominantly native pasture species (including forest bluegrass, Queensland bluegrass, Buffel grass and siratro) produced biomass relatively slowly, but eventually reached the same biomass production as the first mixture 12 weeks after planting. This mixture suppressed parthenium weed re-establishment by 78% compared to the control treatment. Its tolerance to the invasion of other weed species and the maintenance of forage species evenness was also superior. The total diversity was five times higher for the mixture communities as compared to the plant community in the control treatment. Therefore, using the suppressive pasture mixtures may provide an improved sustainable management approach for parthenium weed in grasslands.https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12381/1524enenginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAcceso abiertoINVASIVE ALIEN SPECIESPARTHENIUM WEEDSPECIES DIVERSITYPASTURESSUPPRESSIVE PLANTSManaging an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.ArticlePublishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionreponame:AINFOinstname:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuariainstacron:Instituto Nacional de Investigación AgropecuariaBELGERI, A.BAJWA, A.A.SHABBIR, ANAVIE, S.VIVIAN-SMITH, G.ADKINS, S.SWORDsword-2022-10-20T22:42:21.original.xmlOriginal SWORD entry documentapplication/octet-stream2612https://redi.anii.org.uy/jspui/bitstream/20.500.12381/1524/1/sword-2022-10-20T22%3a42%3a21.original.xml903f84fe29797332145eb4c58dc8d4beMD5120.500.12381/15242022-10-20 22:42:21.52oai:redi.anii.org.uy:20.500.12381/1524Gobiernohttp://inia.uyhttps://redi.anii.org.uy/oai/requestlorrego@inia.org.uyUruguayopendoar:2022-10-21T01:42:21AINFO - Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuariafalse
spellingShingle Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
BELGERI, A.
INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES
PARTHENIUM WEED
SPECIES DIVERSITY
PASTURES
SUPPRESSIVE PLANTS
status_str publishedVersion
title Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
title_full Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
title_fullStr Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
title_full_unstemmed Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
title_short Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
title_sort Managing an invasive weed species, parthenium hysterophorus, with suppressive plant species in australian grasslands.
topic INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES
PARTHENIUM WEED
SPECIES DIVERSITY
PASTURES
SUPPRESSIVE PLANTS
url http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=61526&biblioteca=vazio&busca=61526&qFacets=61526