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Journal of the Australian Rangeland Society
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Assessing the invasion threat of non-native plant species in protected areas using Herbarium specimen and ecological survey data. A case study in two rangeland bioregions in Queensland

Michael R. Ngugi A B and Victor John Neldner A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Queensland Herbarium, Department of Science Information Technology and Innovation, Mt Coot-tha Road, Toowong, Qld 4066, Australia.

B Corresponding author. Email: Michael.ngugi@dsiti.qld.gov.au

The Rangeland Journal 39(1) 85-95 https://doi.org/10.1071/RJ16076
Submitted: 8 August 2016  Accepted: 18 November 2016   Published: 28 December 2016

Abstract

Naturalised non-native plants that become invasive pose a significant threat to the conservation of biodiversity in protected areas (areas dedicated and managed for long-term conservation of nature), economic productivity of agricultural businesses, and societal impacts including community, culture infrastructure and health. Quantifying the spread, potential dominance and invasion threat of these species is fundamental to effective eradication and development of threat mitigation policy. But this is often hampered by the lack of comprehensive data. This study used existing ecological survey data from 2548 sites and 64 758 Herbarium specimen records to document the status and abundance of non-native plants in two case study bioregions, Cape York Peninsula (CYP) and the Desert Uplands (DEU) in Queensland covering a total area of 186 697 km2. There were 406 non-native species in the CYP, 186 (45.6%) of which are known environmental weeds and 159 non-natives in DEU, of which 69 (43.5%) are environmental weeds. Inside the protected areas, there were 98 species of environmental weeds in CYP, 27 of which are listed as weeds of State significance (Weeds of National Significance (WONS), Queensland declared and non-declared pest plants categories). In DEU, there were 18 environmental weeds inside protected areas and none of them was listed as a weed of State significance. Non-native species that recorded foliage cover dominance in the ecological site data are generally recognised as environmental weeds in Queensland. The threat of weeds from outside of protected areas was serious, with 41 weeds of State significance found in CYP, five of which are WONS, and 25 weeds of State significance found in DEU, 10 of which are WONS.

Additional keywords: alien plants, declared weeds, environmental weeds, invasive species, naturalised species.


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