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Invasiveness Assessment - Thistle (Onopordum dissectum) in Victoria

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Plant invasiveness is determined by evaluating a plant’s biological and ecological characteristics against criteria that encompass establishment requirements, growth rate and competitive ability, methods of reproduction, and dispersal mechanisms.

Each characteristic, or criterion, is assessed against a list of intensity ratings. Depending upon information found, a rating of Low, Medium Low, Medium High or High is assigned to that criterion. Where no data is available to answer a criterion, a rating of medium (M) is applied. A description of the invasiveness criteria and intensity ratings used in this process can be viewed here.

The following table provides information on the invasiveness of Thistle.

A more detailed description of the methodology of the Victorian Weed Risk Assessment (WRA) method can be viewed below:

Victorian Weed Risk Assessment (WRA) method (PDF - 630 KB)
Victorian Weed Risk Assessment (WRA) method (DOC - 1026 KB)
To view the information PDF requires the use of a PDF reader. This can be installed for free from the Adobe website (external link).

Common Name: Thistle
Scientific name: Onopordum dissectum

Question
Comments
Confidence
Rating
Establishment
Germination requirements?“Plants typically germinate in fall [autumn] after first rains” (Healy, Enloe & DiTomaso, 2005).
MH
MH
Establishment requirements?Most species grow in rocky or stony ground, roadsides, waste places and similar dry, open habitats (Tutin, 1993). Onopordum in general grow along roadsides and in fields (Healy, Enloe & DiTomaso, 2005). Requires open space.
ML
MH
How much disturbance is required?Most species grow in rocky or stony ground, roadsides, waste places and similar dry, open habitats (Tutin, 1993). Onopordum in general grow along roadsides and in fields (Healy, Enloe & DiTomaso, 2005). Establishes in highly disturbed ecosystems.
ML
MH
Growth/Competitive
Life form?Biennial (Tutin, 1993).
L
MH
Allelopathic properties?No information found.
M
L
Tolerates herb pressure?For all Onopordum, stems spinose-winged, or absent…involucral bracts spine-tipped (Tutin, 1993). Spines on the inflorescence (and probably the stems) would deter herbivory by vertebrates.
MH
MH
Normal growth rate?No information found.
M
L
Stress tolerance to frost, drought, w/logg, sal. etc?Grows in deep dry soils in Spain and Portugal (Rivas-Martinez et al, 2002). No further information found
about stress tolerances.
M
L
Reproduction
Reproductive systemOnopordum reproduce only by seeds (Healy et al, 2005). No further information found.
ML
L
Number of propagules produced?Average of 218 capitula per plant (Briese et al, 1995).No further information found.
M
L
Propagule longevity?No information found.
M
L
Reproductive period?“Flowering stems develop during the second spring/summer season” (Healy, Enloe & DiTomaso, 2005) on this biennial plant (Tutin, 1993), so that they produce seed for only one year.
L
MH
Time to reproductive maturity?Biennial (Tutin, 1993). “Flowering stems develop during the second spring/summer season” (Healy, Enloe & DiTomaso, 2005), within two years of germinating.
MH
MH
Dispersal
Number of mechanisms?No information found.
M
L
How far do they disperse?No information found.
M
L


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