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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. |
Question | Comments | Reference | Rating |
Establishment | |||
Germination requirements? | “Seeds germinate at any time of year but mostly in autumn”. | H | |
Establishment requirements? | Occurs in forested areas (e.g. wet sclerophyll forests), where it would receive shading from overstorey Eucalypts. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | MH |
How much disturbance is required? | Boneseed, however is a weed because of its ability to establish in areas of native vegetation, whether disturbed or not. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | H |
Growth/Competitive | |||
Life form? | A perennial shrub | P & C (1992 p. 274) | L |
Allelopathic properties? | “There is recent evidence that boneseed exercises an allelopathic effect on some native species. Leaf litter and fruit leaches inhibit the germ and growth of some species”. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | ML |
Tolerates herb pressure? | “Seedlings of boneseed are eaten by rabbits”. “Boneseed does not persist when grazed or trampled by stock nor when cultivated”. | P & C (1992 p. 276) P & C (1992 p. 277) | ML |
Normal growth rate? | “There is dense growth of seedling after fire which swamps out other species”. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | H |
Stress tolerance to frost, drought, w/logg, sal. etc? | Tolerant of frost (occurs in South Tasmania): drought (occurs in Mallee). “It is not restricted by climate, tolerates saline conditions”. | P & C (1992 Dist. Map P & C (1992 p. 273) | MH |
Reproduction | |||
Reproductive system | “Reproducing by seed”. “Also reproduces by stem layering and some plants will re sprout after fires or * | P & C (1992 p. 274) | H |
Number of propagules produced? | “Seed production is prolific and up to 50,000 seeds per plant per year have been recorded”. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | H |
Propagule longevity? | “Seed of ssp: Monilifera is longer lived and retains a high viability for 4-5 years at least”. | P & C (1992 p. 276) | L |
Reproductive period? | “Plants live for 10-20 years”. | H | |
Time to reproductive maturity? | “Plants are at least 18 months and sometimes 3 years old before flowering”. | P & C (1992 p. 274) | ML |
Dispersal | |||
Number of mechanisms? | “Birds have been a major agent of spread because they readily eat the fleshy fruit and either pass or regurgitate the seed in a viable condition”. | See P & C (1992 p. 275 for other Mech.) | H |
How far do they disperse? | “Birds and other agents could disperse seeds > 1 km | See P & C (1992 p. 275 for other Mech.) | H |