Invasive alien species require co-ordinated strategic management if negative impacts are to be effectively avoided. Here we describe a strategy for the management of Parthenium hysterophorus L. (Asteraceae) in South Africa. P. hysterophorus is an annual herb native to tropical America, which has become invasive in over 30 countries. The strategy sets goals for (1) the prevention of spread to new areas; (2) local eradication of isolated populations; (3) containment in areas where eradication is not possible; and (4) actions to protect assets where containment is no longer an option. We developed both a national strategy to set policy and to monitor progress towards goals at a national level and an implementation plan to set goals and timeframes for their achievement at local levels. It is not clear, at this stage, whether or not the goals of the strategy are achievable because implementation will face many challenges arising from ecological features of the target plant, social and cultural practices that will influence management, inadequate levels of funding and multiple political considerations. Our strategy proposes regular assessment using high-level indicators, a practice that is widely recognised as essential but seldom implemented at a national scale. Because the outcomes are uncertain, it is vital that regular monitoring of outcomes should be instituted from the start, so that both appropriate adjustments can be made to the strategy and lessons for the implementation of similar strategies elsewhere can be derived.
In South Africa, the leaf-feeding beetle, Zygogramma bicolorata Pallister (Coleoptera: Chyrsomelidae), was released in 2013 against the invasive annual herb Parthenium hysterophorus L. (Asteraceae: Heliantheae). Poor field establishment and variable incidence of the beetle, during the first few years after release, have led to concerns surrounding potential constraints, including host plant quality. This study assessed the influence of high, medium and low host plant quality, as influenced by fertiliser application, on the survival, development and fecundity of Z. bicolorata. Although egg to adult survival was high (∼80%) and did not differ between plant quality treatments, larvae developed fastest on plants of high and medium quality. Larval feeding was highly damaging, reducing the growth, reproduction and biomass of P. hysterophorus in all three plant quality treatments. Fecundity was associated with plant quality, with larger, more fecund females developing on higher quality plants. Overall, this research may aid current mass-rearing efforts, further field research to verify these findings and direct the selection of more suitable release sites for Z. bicolorata in South Africa.
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