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- Title
Demographics of Eucalyptus grandis and implications for invasion.
- Authors
Musengi, Kudakwashe; Archibald, Sally
- Abstract
Alien invasive species can have negative impacts on the functioning of ecosystems. Plantation species such as pines have become serious invaders in many parts of the world, but eucalypts have not been nearly as successful invaders. This is surprising considering that in their native habitat they dominate almost all vegetation types. Available theory on the qualities that characterise invasive species was used to assess the invasive potential of Eucalyptus grandis – a common plantation species globally. To determine rates of establishment of E. grandis outside plantations, we compared population demographics and reproductive traits at two locations in Mpumalanga, South Africa: one at higher elevation with more frost. Eucalyptus grandis has a short generation time. We found no evidence that establishment of E. grandis was limiting its spread into native grassland vegetation, but it does appear that recruitment is limited by frost and fire over much of its range in Mpumalanga. Populations at both study locations displayed characteristics of good recruitment. Size class distributions showed definite bottlenecks to recruitment which were more severe when exposed to frost at higher elevations. Generally, the rate of spread is low suggesting that the populations are on the establishing populations’ invasion stage. This research gives no indication that there are any factors that would prevent eucalyptus from becoming invasive in the future, and the projected increase in winter temperatures should be a cause for concern as frost is currently probably slowing recruitment of E. grandis across much of its planted range.
- Subjects
MPUMALANGA (South Africa); EUCALYPTUS grandis; DEMOGRAPHIC anthropology; PLANTATIONS &; the environment; DEMOGRAPHIC surveys; CITIES &; towns &; the environment
- Publication
Koedoe: African Protected Area Conservation & Science, 2017, Vol 59, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0075-6458
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4102/koedoe.v59i1.1437