Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation

Studies of invasive Australian Acacia have shown that many seeds are still produced and accumulate in soil stored seed banks regardless of the presence of seed-targeting biological control agents. This is despite claims of biological control success, although there is generally a lack of data on the...

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Main Authors: Matthys Strydom, Ruan Veldtman, Mzabalazo Z. Ngwenya, Karen J. Esler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/6816.pdf
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spelling doaj-859e874a519a4dd8a098129be5af75812020-11-24T23:56:27ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-04-017e681610.7717/peerj.6816Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variationMatthys Strydom0Ruan Veldtman1Mzabalazo Z. Ngwenya2Karen J. Esler3Department of Conservation Ecology and Entomology, Stellenbosch University, Matieland, South AfricaDepartment of Conservation Ecology and Entomology, Stellenbosch University, Matieland, South AfricaStatistics in Ecology, Environment and Conservation (SEEC), Department of Statistical Sciences, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South AfricaDepartment of Conservation Ecology and Entomology, Stellenbosch University, Matieland, South AfricaStudies of invasive Australian Acacia have shown that many seeds are still produced and accumulate in soil stored seed banks regardless of the presence of seed-targeting biological control agents. This is despite claims of biological control success, although there is generally a lack of data on the seed production of invasive Australian Acacia before and after the release of the respective agents. We aimed to quantify seed production and seed survival of invasive Australian Acacia currently under biological control. The seed production and survival (proportion of aborted, predated and surviving seeds) of A. longifolia, A. pycnantha and A. saligna were each studied at four to five sites in the Western Cape of South Africa. The relationships between seed production and stand characteristics were determined and the relative effects of seed predation and abortion on seed survival were established. The investigated invasive Australian Acacia produced many seeds that survived the pre-dispersal stage despite long-term presence of released biological control agents. It was shown that seed crop size is the only significant factor influencing seed survival of the studied Australian Acacia species. Furthermore, the seeds surviving per tree and per square meter were related to tree size. No quantitative evidence was found to suggest that seed-reducing biological control agents are having an impact on the population dynamics of their Australian Acacia hosts. This study illustrates the importance of studying the seed ecology of invasive plants before biological control agents are selected and released.https://peerj.com/articles/6816.pdfPopulation dynamicsInvasive plantsReproductive ecologySeed-reducing agentsSeed survivalAllometric relationships
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthys Strydom
Ruan Veldtman
Mzabalazo Z. Ngwenya
Karen J. Esler
spellingShingle Matthys Strydom
Ruan Veldtman
Mzabalazo Z. Ngwenya
Karen J. Esler
Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
PeerJ
Population dynamics
Invasive plants
Reproductive ecology
Seed-reducing agents
Seed survival
Allometric relationships
author_facet Matthys Strydom
Ruan Veldtman
Mzabalazo Z. Ngwenya
Karen J. Esler
author_sort Matthys Strydom
title Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
title_short Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
title_full Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
title_fullStr Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
title_full_unstemmed Seed survival of Australian Acacia in the Western Cape of South Africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
title_sort seed survival of australian acacia in the western cape of south africa in the presence of biological control agents and given environmental variation
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Studies of invasive Australian Acacia have shown that many seeds are still produced and accumulate in soil stored seed banks regardless of the presence of seed-targeting biological control agents. This is despite claims of biological control success, although there is generally a lack of data on the seed production of invasive Australian Acacia before and after the release of the respective agents. We aimed to quantify seed production and seed survival of invasive Australian Acacia currently under biological control. The seed production and survival (proportion of aborted, predated and surviving seeds) of A. longifolia, A. pycnantha and A. saligna were each studied at four to five sites in the Western Cape of South Africa. The relationships between seed production and stand characteristics were determined and the relative effects of seed predation and abortion on seed survival were established. The investigated invasive Australian Acacia produced many seeds that survived the pre-dispersal stage despite long-term presence of released biological control agents. It was shown that seed crop size is the only significant factor influencing seed survival of the studied Australian Acacia species. Furthermore, the seeds surviving per tree and per square meter were related to tree size. No quantitative evidence was found to suggest that seed-reducing biological control agents are having an impact on the population dynamics of their Australian Acacia hosts. This study illustrates the importance of studying the seed ecology of invasive plants before biological control agents are selected and released.
topic Population dynamics
Invasive plants
Reproductive ecology
Seed-reducing agents
Seed survival
Allometric relationships
url https://peerj.com/articles/6816.pdf
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