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A crowding-dependent population model for woody weeds – Where size does matter

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Zull, A. F., Lawes, R.A. and Cacho, O.J. (2016) A crowding-dependent population model for woody weeds – Where size does matter. Environmental Modelling & Software, 76 . pp. 108-116. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2015.10.026

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Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2015.10.026

Abstract

Integrated weed management for woody weeds is difficult to implement, partly due to the unknown effects of plant size on intraspecific plant competition. Moreover, weed literature often uses density (quantity) as a measure of control efficacy; this is insufficient for woody weeds due to varying plant sizes within populations.
Using Ziziphus mauritiana as a case study, we describe a method of simultaneously measuring plant sizes and density: crowdedness. A new deterministic crowding-dependent matrix population model was developed by grouping the population into ten life stages. Elasticity analyses and simulations showed that removing the largest plant had the greatest control efficacy on new and old infestations in riparian and upland zones; despite subsequent mass recruitments. The model also accommodated for shocks without overcompensating. The alternative measure of plant abundance developed in this paper, provides a useful tool to assist in woody-weed control decisions and provide a better measure of weed-control efficacy.

Item Type:Article
Business groups:Crop and Food Science
Keywords:Ziziphus mauritiana; Density dependence; Population modelling; Matrix model; Rangeland; Weed
Live Archive:22 Jul 2025 05:01
Last Modified:22 Jul 2025 05:01

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