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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 in autumn and spring”. | P & C (1992 p. 587) | MH |
Establishment requirements? | Establishes in open habitats and ecosystems e.g. areas of abandoned cultivation. | P & C (1992 p. 587) | ML |
How much disturbance is required? | Invades undisturbed ecosystems (e.g. alpine and sub-alpine vegetation). | Carr et al (1992) | H |
Growth/Competitive | |||
Life form? | Erect biennial herb. Other. | P & C (1992 p. 586) | L |
Allelopathic properties? | “Allelopathic effects have been reported on wheat seedlings but this is not a practical problem because the plant is not a weed of cereal crops”. | P & C (1992 p. 588) | ML |
Tolerates herb pressure? | “The rosettes, which cover a large area, are rarely eaten by livestock”. | P & C (1992 p. 587) | MH |
Normal growth rate? | “It prefers disturbed habitats with little other vegetation”. “It is easily crowded out by grasses or other competing vegetation”. | Bassard et al (2000 p. 322/23) | ML |
Stress tolerance to frost, drought, w/logg, sal. etc? | Tolerant of frost (occurs in southern Tasmania); drought (occurs in central New South Wales and Western Australia). Occurs in ‘moist meadows and drainage’s’ in California. | P & C (1992 p. 586) Bassard et al (2000 p. 323) | MH |
Reproduction | |||
Reproductive system | “Reproducing by seed”. “Flowers are autogamous, that is they self-pollinate if cross-pollination does not occur’. | P & C (1992 p. 586/87) | ML |
Number of propagules produced? | “Single plants produce 200 to 300 capsuled with 500 to 800 seeds per capsule. This seed production can be 100,000 to 240,000 seeds per plant”. | Bassard et al (2000 p. 323) | H |
Propagule longevity? | “In Denmark, seeds recovered from soil samples claimed to be more than 650 years old were viable”. | P & C (1992 p. 587) | H |
Reproductive period? | “Most plants are biennial but occasionally they can be annual or short lived perennials”. | P & C (1992 p. 587) | L |
Time to reproductive maturity? | “Plants usually bolt, flowering stem, in the second year and have a single stem covered with over lapping; woolly leaves from base to inflorescence”. | Bassard et al (2000 p. 322) | MH |
Dispersal | |||
Number of mechanisms? | “Seeds are not adapted to dispersal by wind or animals and usually fall to the ground. Field studies report that seeds will disperse as far as eleven metres, but 75% fall within one metre of the parent plant”. “Most seeds fall within 1.5 metres of the parent plant when it is moved by wind or large animals. | MH | |
How far do they disperse? | Bassard et al (200 p. 322) P & C (1992 p. 587) | L |
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