Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria

Asclepias syriaca is an invasive alien plant that has recently spread in Central Europe. The spatiotemporal spread of A. syriaca was reconstructed based on the distribution data for Austria. A. syriaca has increased in abundance and range, especially after the year 2005. At present, the species occu...

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Main Authors: Follak Swen, Schleicher Corina, Schwarz Michael
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Sciendo 2018-12-01
Series:Die Bodenkultur
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/boku-2018-0022
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spelling doaj-d794deb054904deca2e3c5c77e00fd4a2021-09-05T21:00:34ZdeuSciendoDie Bodenkultur0006-54712018-12-0169425726510.2478/boku-2018-0022Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in AustriaFollak Swen0Schleicher Corina1Schwarz Michael2Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety, Institute for Sustainable Plant Production, Spargelfeldstraße 191, 1220Vienna, AustriaAustrian Agency for Health and Food Safety, Data, Statistics and Risk Assessment, Zinzendorfgasse 27, 8010Graz, AustriaAustrian Agency for Health and Food Safety, Data, Statistics and Risk Assessment, Spargelfeldstraße 191, 1220Vienna, AustriaAsclepias syriaca is an invasive alien plant that has recently spread in Central Europe. The spatiotemporal spread of A. syriaca was reconstructed based on the distribution data for Austria. A. syriaca has increased in abundance and range, especially after the year 2005. At present, the species occurs primarily in eastern Austria (Vienna, Lower Austria), while it was rarely recorded in southern and western Austria. Further spread and range filling is probable. Moreover, the distribution of A. syriaca along roadsides and the role of road type and adjoining land use in facilitating its spread were studied in an area of high presence of the species in Lower Austria in 2018. It was shown that A. syriaca occurred regularly along roadsides and the chance of finding A. syriaca was higher along unpaved roads and along roadsides bordered by forests and grassland. The results indicate that the road network contributes to the spread of A. syriaca in the study area, most likely by providing suitable and well connected habitats. If A. syriaca densities are to be lowered, emphasis should be placed on both a proper roadside management (e.g., mowing regimes) and on the control of the species in the respective adjacent habitat.https://doi.org/10.2478/boku-2018-0022distributioninvasive alien plantsland usemanagementroadsideverbreitunginvasive gebietsfremde pflanzenlandnutzungstraßenränderbekämpfung
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Follak Swen
Schleicher Corina
Schwarz Michael
spellingShingle Follak Swen
Schleicher Corina
Schwarz Michael
Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
Die Bodenkultur
distribution
invasive alien plants
land use
management
roadside
verbreitung
invasive gebietsfremde pflanzen
landnutzung
straßenränder
bekämpfung
author_facet Follak Swen
Schleicher Corina
Schwarz Michael
author_sort Follak Swen
title Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
title_short Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
title_full Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
title_fullStr Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
title_full_unstemmed Roads support the spread of invasive Asclepias syriaca in Austria
title_sort roads support the spread of invasive asclepias syriaca in austria
publisher Sciendo
series Die Bodenkultur
issn 0006-5471
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Asclepias syriaca is an invasive alien plant that has recently spread in Central Europe. The spatiotemporal spread of A. syriaca was reconstructed based on the distribution data for Austria. A. syriaca has increased in abundance and range, especially after the year 2005. At present, the species occurs primarily in eastern Austria (Vienna, Lower Austria), while it was rarely recorded in southern and western Austria. Further spread and range filling is probable. Moreover, the distribution of A. syriaca along roadsides and the role of road type and adjoining land use in facilitating its spread were studied in an area of high presence of the species in Lower Austria in 2018. It was shown that A. syriaca occurred regularly along roadsides and the chance of finding A. syriaca was higher along unpaved roads and along roadsides bordered by forests and grassland. The results indicate that the road network contributes to the spread of A. syriaca in the study area, most likely by providing suitable and well connected habitats. If A. syriaca densities are to be lowered, emphasis should be placed on both a proper roadside management (e.g., mowing regimes) and on the control of the species in the respective adjacent habitat.
topic distribution
invasive alien plants
land use
management
roadside
verbreitung
invasive gebietsfremde pflanzen
landnutzung
straßenränder
bekämpfung
url https://doi.org/10.2478/boku-2018-0022
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AT schleichercorina roadssupportthespreadofinvasiveasclepiassyriacainaustria
AT schwarzmichael roadssupportthespreadofinvasiveasclepiassyriacainaustria
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