Livestock as a potential biological control agent for an invasive wetland plant

dc.contributor.author

Silliman, BR

dc.contributor.author

Mozdzer, T

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Angelini, C

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Brundage, JE

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Esselink, P

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Bakker, JP

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Gedan, KB

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van de Koppel, J

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Baldwin, AH

dc.contributor.editor

Yoccoz, N

dc.date.accessioned

2014-09-29T18:00:27Z

dc.date.issued

2014

dc.description.abstract

Invasive species threaten biodiversity and incur costs exceeding billions of US$. Eradication efforts, however, are nearly always unsuccessful. Throughout much of North America, land managers have used expensive, and ultimately ineffective, techniques to combat invasive Phragmites australis in marshes. Here, we reveal that Phragmites may potentially be controlled by employing an affordable measure from its native European range: livestock grazing. Experimental field tests demonstrate that rotational goat grazing (where goats have no choice but to graze Phragmites) can reduce Phragmites cover from 100 to 20% and that cows and horses also readily consume this plant. These results, combined with the fact that Europeans have suppressed Phragmites through seasonal livestock grazing for 6,000 years, suggest Phragmites management can shift to include more economical and effective top-down control strategies. More generally, these findings support an emerging paradigm shift in conservation from high-cost eradication to economically sustainable control of dominant invasive species.

dc.identifier.issn

2167-8359

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9154

dc.publisher

PeerJ

dc.relation.ispartof

PeerJ

dc.relation.isversionof

10.7717/peerj.567

dc.subject

Top-down control

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Salt marshes

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Invasive species

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Biocontrol

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Livestock as a potential biological control agent for an invasive wetland plant

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.author-url

http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.567

pubs.begin-page

e567

pubs.notes

Invasive species threaten biodiversity and incur costs exceeding billions of US$. Eradication efforts, however, are nearly always unsuccessful. Throughout much of North America, land managers have used expensive, and ultimately ineffective, techniques to combat invasive Phragmites australis in marshes. Here, we reveal that Phragmites may potentially be controlled by employing an affordable measure from its native European range: livestock grazing. Experimental field tests demonstrate that rotational goat grazing (where goats have no choice but to graze Phragmites) can reduce Phragmites cover from 100 to 20% and that cows and horses also readily consume this plant. These results, combined with the fact that Europeans have suppressed Phragmites through seasonal livestock grazing for 6,000 years, suggest Phragmites management can shift to include more economical and effective top-down control strategies. More generally, these findings support an emerging paradigm shift in conservation from high-cost eradication to economically sustainable control of dominant invasive species.

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Marine Science and Conservation

pubs.organisational-group

Nicholas School of the Environment

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

2

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