Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain

Within-field demography of weeds exhibiting wind-mediated long distance seed movement can be largely governed by extra-field seed-source populations. Thus, for these species, a clear understanding of the temporal and spatial patterns of seed dispersal can benefit the development of effective management options. The spatial distribution of the seeds released from the onset of fruiting, in early summer, to the onset of the rainy season, in early autumn, was studied during 2 years at a Mediterranean-climate locality in Erigeron bonariensis L. (Hairy fleabane), a wind-dispersed invasive weed inhabiting ruderal environments and crop fields. Each year, a small source population was established in an open field in SW Spain and seed traps were arranged in the eight cardinal directions at distances up to 100 m (year 1), or in the NE and NW directions at distances up to 65 m (year 2). Counts of trapped seeds were carried out at 4–6 day intervals and the number of seeds released by the source population was estimated each year in most census dates. Four empirical dispersal models based on either thin-tailed or fat-tailed density kernels were tested using year 1 data for their ability to represent the spatial distribution of seeds. To test for anisotropic dispersal, model parameters were allowed to vary according to the wind pattern in each cardinal direction. Based on information criteria, a model including a fat-tailed, Log-hyperbolic secant kernel showing parameter response to the wind pattern, highlighting striking anisotropic dispersal, was selected and evaluated using year 2 data. Distance percentiles 50 and 80 attained by the seed crop released in year 1 season were modeled at 530 m and 10,498 m, respectively. The opposite quadrants encompassing the dominant downwind (N-NE) and upwind directions (S-SW) received 52.5% and 10.8% of seeds. The year 1 population, consisting of 85 plants, generated a modeled seed rain of at least 10 seeds m−2 up to 200 m downwind. Implications of results for management of this herbicide resistance-prone species are discussed.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bastida, F., Menéndez, Julio, Camacho, Daniel, González-Andújar, José Luis
Other Authors: Sociedad Española de Malherbología
Format: artículo biblioteca
Published: Elsevier 2021-10
Subjects:Anemochory, Anisotropic dispersal, Conyza bonariensis, Dispersal kernel, Hairy fleabane,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/268102
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100011011
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009417
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100005604
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spelling dig-ias-es-10261-2681022022-04-29T06:09:09Z Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain Bastida, F. Menéndez, Julio Camacho, Daniel González-Andújar, José Luis Sociedad Española de Malherbología Junta de Andalucía Universidad de Huelva Anemochory Anisotropic dispersal Conyza bonariensis Dispersal kernel Hairy fleabane Within-field demography of weeds exhibiting wind-mediated long distance seed movement can be largely governed by extra-field seed-source populations. Thus, for these species, a clear understanding of the temporal and spatial patterns of seed dispersal can benefit the development of effective management options. The spatial distribution of the seeds released from the onset of fruiting, in early summer, to the onset of the rainy season, in early autumn, was studied during 2 years at a Mediterranean-climate locality in Erigeron bonariensis L. (Hairy fleabane), a wind-dispersed invasive weed inhabiting ruderal environments and crop fields. Each year, a small source population was established in an open field in SW Spain and seed traps were arranged in the eight cardinal directions at distances up to 100 m (year 1), or in the NE and NW directions at distances up to 65 m (year 2). Counts of trapped seeds were carried out at 4–6 day intervals and the number of seeds released by the source population was estimated each year in most census dates. Four empirical dispersal models based on either thin-tailed or fat-tailed density kernels were tested using year 1 data for their ability to represent the spatial distribution of seeds. To test for anisotropic dispersal, model parameters were allowed to vary according to the wind pattern in each cardinal direction. Based on information criteria, a model including a fat-tailed, Log-hyperbolic secant kernel showing parameter response to the wind pattern, highlighting striking anisotropic dispersal, was selected and evaluated using year 2 data. Distance percentiles 50 and 80 attained by the seed crop released in year 1 season were modeled at 530 m and 10,498 m, respectively. The opposite quadrants encompassing the dominant downwind (N-NE) and upwind directions (S-SW) received 52.5% and 10.8% of seeds. The year 1 population, consisting of 85 plants, generated a modeled seed rain of at least 10 seeds m−2 up to 200 m downwind. Implications of results for management of this herbicide resistance-prone species are discussed. DC received a grant from the Spanish Society of Weed Science (SEMh). This work was supported in part by research project C03-017 (PAI-Junta de Andalucía Regional Government, Andalusia, Spain). Funding for open access provided by Universidad de Huelva / CBUA. 2022-04-28T09:10:13Z 2022-04-28T09:10:13Z 2021-10 2022-04-28T09:10:13Z artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 doi: 10.1016/j.cropro.2021.105720 issn: 0261-2194 Crop Protection 148: 105720 (2021) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/268102 10.1016/j.cropro.2021.105720 http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100011011 http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009417 http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100005604 Publisher's version http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cropro.2021.105720 Sí open Elsevier
institution IAS ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-ias-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IAS España
topic Anemochory
Anisotropic dispersal
Conyza bonariensis
Dispersal kernel
Hairy fleabane
Anemochory
Anisotropic dispersal
Conyza bonariensis
Dispersal kernel
Hairy fleabane
spellingShingle Anemochory
Anisotropic dispersal
Conyza bonariensis
Dispersal kernel
Hairy fleabane
Anemochory
Anisotropic dispersal
Conyza bonariensis
Dispersal kernel
Hairy fleabane
Bastida, F.
Menéndez, Julio
Camacho, Daniel
González-Andújar, José Luis
Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
description Within-field demography of weeds exhibiting wind-mediated long distance seed movement can be largely governed by extra-field seed-source populations. Thus, for these species, a clear understanding of the temporal and spatial patterns of seed dispersal can benefit the development of effective management options. The spatial distribution of the seeds released from the onset of fruiting, in early summer, to the onset of the rainy season, in early autumn, was studied during 2 years at a Mediterranean-climate locality in Erigeron bonariensis L. (Hairy fleabane), a wind-dispersed invasive weed inhabiting ruderal environments and crop fields. Each year, a small source population was established in an open field in SW Spain and seed traps were arranged in the eight cardinal directions at distances up to 100 m (year 1), or in the NE and NW directions at distances up to 65 m (year 2). Counts of trapped seeds were carried out at 4–6 day intervals and the number of seeds released by the source population was estimated each year in most census dates. Four empirical dispersal models based on either thin-tailed or fat-tailed density kernels were tested using year 1 data for their ability to represent the spatial distribution of seeds. To test for anisotropic dispersal, model parameters were allowed to vary according to the wind pattern in each cardinal direction. Based on information criteria, a model including a fat-tailed, Log-hyperbolic secant kernel showing parameter response to the wind pattern, highlighting striking anisotropic dispersal, was selected and evaluated using year 2 data. Distance percentiles 50 and 80 attained by the seed crop released in year 1 season were modeled at 530 m and 10,498 m, respectively. The opposite quadrants encompassing the dominant downwind (N-NE) and upwind directions (S-SW) received 52.5% and 10.8% of seeds. The year 1 population, consisting of 85 plants, generated a modeled seed rain of at least 10 seeds m−2 up to 200 m downwind. Implications of results for management of this herbicide resistance-prone species are discussed.
author2 Sociedad Española de Malherbología
author_facet Sociedad Española de Malherbología
Bastida, F.
Menéndez, Julio
Camacho, Daniel
González-Andújar, José Luis
format artículo
topic_facet Anemochory
Anisotropic dispersal
Conyza bonariensis
Dispersal kernel
Hairy fleabane
author Bastida, F.
Menéndez, Julio
Camacho, Daniel
González-Andújar, José Luis
author_sort Bastida, F.
title Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
title_short Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
title_full Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
title_fullStr Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
title_full_unstemmed Season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed Erigeron bonariensis in south-western Spain
title_sort season-long seed dispersal patterns of the invasive weed erigeron bonariensis in south-western spain
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021-10
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/268102
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100011011
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009417
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100005604
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