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Developing Minimal-Input Techniques For Invasive Plant Management: Perimeter Treatments Enlarge Native Grass Patches

INVASIVE PLANT SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT(2020)

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摘要
There is a continual need for invasive plant science to develop approaches for cost-effectively benefiting native over nonnative species in dynamic management and biophysical contexts, including within predominantly nonnative plant landscapes containing only small patches of native plants. Our objective was to test the effectiveness of a minimal-input strategy for enlarging native species patches within a nonnative plant matrix. In Pecos National Historical Park, New Mexico, USA, we identified 40 native perennial grass patches within a matrix of the nonnative annual forb kochia [Bassia scoparia(L.) A.J. Scott]. We mechanically cutB. scopariain a 2-m-wide ring surrounding the perimeters of half the native grass patches (with the other half as uncut controls) and measured change in native grass patch size (relative to pretreatment) for 3 yr. Native grass patches around whichB. scopariawas cut grew quickly the first posttreatment year and by the third year had increased in size four times more than control patches. Treated native grass patches expanded by an average of 25 m(2), from 4 m(2)in October 2015 before treatment to 29 m(2)in October 2018. The experiment occurred during a dry period, conditions that should favorB. scopariaand contraction of the native grasses, suggesting that the observed increase in native grasses occurred despite suboptimal climatic conditions. Strategically treating around native patches to enlarge them over time showed promise as a minimal-input technique for increasing the proportion of the landscape dominated by native plants.
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关键词
Archaeological resources, Bassia scoparia, cultural resource management, kochia, national park, perennial grass
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