Biological Control of South African Plants that are Invasive Elsewhere in the World: A Review of Earlier and Current Programmes

IF 1.2 4区 农林科学 Q3 ENTOMOLOGY
T. Olckers, J. Coetzee, D. Egli, G. Martin, I. Paterson, G. Sutton, A. Wood
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

South Africa supports a rich floral diversity, with 21 643 native plant taxa that include a high proportion (76.3%) of endemic species, and many of these favoured as ornamentals, both locally and globally. Consequently, South Africa has contributed substantially to global plant invasions, with 1093 native taxa (5% of all species) naturalized in other countries. At least 80 taxa are invasive in natural or semi-natural ecosystems elsewhere, while an additional 132 taxa are potentially invasive. Of the global naturalized flora, 8.2% originate from South Africa and largely comprise species of Poaceae, Asteraceae, Iridaceae and Fabaceae. Australia, in particular, but also Europe and North America are major recipients of South African weeds. However, few countries have targeted South African plants for biological control (biocontrol), with most efforts undertaken by Australia. Previous and current targets have involved only 26 species with 17 agents (15 insects, one mite and one rust fungus) of South African origin released on five target species in Australia and the United States of America. South Africa's history of weed biocontrol, together with a large cohort of active scientists, is currently facilitating several internationally funded programmes targeting invasive plants of South African origin. In particular, the recently inaugurated Centre for Biological Control at Rhodes University and the University of KwaZulu-Natal have provided the impetus for novel efforts on five new target species and renewed efforts on four previously targeted species. In this contribution, we review the history of earlier biocontrol programmes against weeds of South African origin and the status of projects currently in progress in South Africa.
在世界其他地方入侵的南非植物的生物防治:早期和当前计划的回顾
南非拥有丰富的花卉多样性,有21643个本地植物分类群,其中包括高比例(76.3%)的特有物种,其中许多在当地和全球都被视为观赏植物。因此,南非对全球植物入侵做出了重大贡献,有1093个本地分类群(占所有物种的5%)在其他国家归化。至少有80个分类群在其他地方的自然或半自然生态系统中具有入侵性,另有132个分类群具有潜在入侵性。在全球归化植物群中,8.2%起源于南非,主要包括菊科、菊科、鸢尾科和蚕豆科。尤其是澳大利亚,欧洲和北美也是南非杂草的主要种植地。然而,很少有国家将南非植物作为生物控制(生物控制)的目标,大多数努力都由澳大利亚承担。以前和目前的目标只涉及26个物种,在澳大利亚和美利坚合众国的5个目标物种上释放了17种南非来源的药剂(15种昆虫、一种螨和一种锈真菌)。南非杂草生物控制的历史,加上一大批活跃的科学家,目前正在推动几个由国际资助的针对南非入侵植物的项目。特别是,罗兹大学和夸祖鲁-纳塔尔大学最近成立的生物控制中心推动了对五个新目标物种的新努力和对四个先前目标物种的重新努力。在这篇文章中,我们回顾了早期针对南非杂草的生物防治计划的历史,以及南非目前正在进行的项目的现状。
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来源期刊
African Entomology
African Entomology 生物-昆虫学
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: African Entomology (ISSN 1021-3589 – print / 2224-8854 – online) replaced the old Journal of the Entomological Society of Southern Africa in 1993. A single volume consisting of two issues (March and September) is published annually. The journal is indexed in all major abstracting journals African Entomology is a peer reviewed scientific journal that publishes original research articles and short communications on all aspects of entomology, with an emphasis on the advancement of entomology on the African continent.
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