Demography and management of the invasive plant species Hypericum perforatum. II. Construction and use of an individual-based model to predict population dynamics and the effects of management strategies
Authored by YM Buckley, DT Briese, M Rees
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2003.00822.x
Sponsors:
Leverhulme Trust
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Cooperative Research Centres (CRC)
Platforms:
Delphi
Pascal
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. Hypericum perforatum , St John's wort, is an invasive weed of natural
and agro-ecosystems in south-eastern Australia. In previous work we used
a long-term data set to determine which plant traits and environmental
factors influence population growth and persistence in this species.
These results were then used to parameterize an individual-based model
of the population dynamics of H. perforatum , and this model was used to
make predictions about what control strategies will be most effective
for populations in open and shaded sites.
2. The model was constructed using multi-level, mixed-effects
statistical models of growth, survival, fecundity and damage, incorporating intrinsic plant variables, environmental variables, herbivory and spatial and temporal stochasticity.
3. We found that populations in shaded and open sites had different
dynamics and responses to control strategies. Shaded populations took
longer to reach infestation densities and were less affected by
herbivory and reductions in survival than open populations. Open
populations increased faster in response to increases in rainfall, but
this was not so for shaded populations.
4. We used sensitivity testing and management simulations to predict
that the most successful control strategies will involve a reduction in
vegetative size in both open and shaded sites. Reductions in flowering
stem size and survival in shaded and open sites, respectively, are
predicted to be the next most successful strategies. Dry conditions in
the austral autumn/winter adversely affect populations in both open and
shaded sites.
5. Synthesis and applications . These models have enabled us to rank
management strategies based on quantitative analysis of their potential
effects on population size. This is an important tool not only for
ecologists concerned with control of invasive species but for
conservation biologists trying to understand the factors limiting a rare
or endangered species.
Tags
ecology
growth
Biological-control
Weed