Abstract

Ecología Austral 24:135-144 (2014)Long-term experiences are generally rare in studies on management of invasive species, and they are the key to understand the effectiveness of controls. In this work, we revisited a field experiment set seven years ago to evaluate the effects of four control measures (pasture sown + fertilizer, fertilizer and selective/non-selective herbicide applications) under two different grazing conditions (grazed and ungrazed) in rangelands from northern grasslands of Tierra del Fuego Island in Southern Patagonia (Argentina) invaded by the exotic weed Hieracium pilosella L. (mouse-ear hawkweed, Asteraceae). To evaluate the effects of the treatments applied seven years ago, we measured the cover of the invasive species, the dominant growth forms, and bare soil. The effects of fertilization depended on the grazing conditions; H. pilosella cover decreased by more than 82% and it was replaced by naturalized herbs with high forage value in the ungrazed-fertilized plots, while it exhibited no decrease in the grazed-fertilized plots after seven years since the application. Both herbicides (selective and non-selective) reduced H. pilosella cover by ca. 90% independently of grazing. However, the non-selective herbicide application resulted in an increase in bare soil cover (15%) independently of grazing. In contrast, the selective broadleaf herbicide application increased the graminoids cover up to a 60% and the bare soil cover was below the 2%. According with the results, we suggest a control strategy based on the local application of selective herbicides and/or fertilizers in conjunction with a transient ban on sheep grazing because it is able to reduce the invader’s cover at midterm and local scale.

Highlights

  • Long-term experiences for the management of a grassland invasive herb: The case of Hieracium pilosella L. in the Fuegian Steppe: Long-term experiences are generally rare in studies on management of invasive species, and they are the key to understand the effectiveness of controls

  • We revisited a field experiment set seven years ago to evaluate the effects of four control measures under two different grazing conditions in rangelands from northern grasslands of Tierra del Fuego Island in Southern Patagonia (Argentina) invaded by the exotic weed Hieracium pilosella L

  • The effects of fertilization depended on the grazing conditions; H. pilosella cover decreased by more than 82% and it was replaced by naturalized herbs with high forage value in the ungrazed-fertilized plots, while it exhibited no decrease in the grazed-fertilized plots after seven years since the application

Read more

Summary

Sección especial

Las medidas apropiadas para contener y controlar las invasiones de malezas buscan promover la regeneración de las especies nativas, mediante la alteración del régimen de perturbaciones y/o la modificación de la disponibilidad de recursos entre las especies dentro de la comunidad receptora En la estepa Fueguina durante 2005 llevamos adelante un estudio sobre alternativas de control para mitigar los efectos de la maleza mediante inter-siembras, aplicación de fertilizantes y herbicidas en combinación con la exclusión del ganado doméstico basados en experiencias similares en el mundo y la región. Se presenta y discute una propuesta de manejo para el estado actual de la invasión de H. pilosella en la estepa Fueguina, basada principalmente en los resultados actuales y lo que se sabe sobre el control de esta especie en otros sitios

Sitio de estudio
Análisis estadísticos
Findings
Implicancias para el manejo de la invasión
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call