Unwelcome South Africans – reflections on weeds in South-east Australia
 Text and photographs by Richard Boon
It is often
said that the second most common threat to biodiversity after habitat
destruction is alien species. The source of the claim is Edward O. Wilson’s
1993 book The Diversity of Life. Others argue that the threat is
overstated, a myth or even a lie. But the impact can be devastating — in
Australia the unique land mammal fauna was decimated after European
colonisation and the most likely causes were introduced foxes and cats and
altered fire regimes. In this article, I will share some learnings about alien
plant management in the state of Victoria using South African weeds as examples [1].
In
KwaZulu-Natal some urban areas have very high weed cover but parts of Victoria
seem weedier. By 2018 in Victoria at least 1235 taxa were recorded as
environmental weeds, that is, plants that invade natural environments. Many more are
casuals or ruderals (grow and occasionally reproduce but have not yet
established self-sustaining populations) and others are naturalised only in disturbed places. Unfortunately, the
number of weedy taxa keeps growing as plants are transported beyond natural
boundaries and environmental change promotes new invasions.
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| Image 1: A weedy grassland on the edge of the Plenty Gorge, Melbourne. The grey plant is Artichoke Thistle and the purple-flowered plant is Pateron's Curse. | 
I recently moved from Durban to live in suburban Melbourne. Our home is on a 530 m2 freehold plot. The climate here is temperate with fairly hot summers and cool winters. Average annual rainfall at home is 740 mm, falling more or less year-round with a small increase in spring and early summer. With our purchase, we inherited a neglected garden full of weeds and a mixed bunch of small trees and shrubs, including the only Rothmannia globosa September Bells I have seen in Melbourne. It flowered beautifully this year. Most homeowners in our suburb maintain their own gardens and verges that, although Council-owned, are our responsibility. Mowing doesn’t excite me so most of our lawn has been replaced with mulch and indigenous plants from nearby nurseries that only stock local species. The makeover was tough work. When we started in February, temperatures frequently reached 350C and the clay soil had hardened and I needed a pick to dig even a small hole. Planting is not advised until the autumn break when the first decent rainfall exceeds evaporation and plants can grow again but eager to make progress, I dived in. At first, it felt weird planting eucalypts, wattles, banksias and hakeas but I find I am getting used to them.
No matter
how thorough you are, follow up is essential. Ironically three of my most challenging
problems are South African – Ehrharta erecta Panic Veldt-grass,
Oxalis pes-caprae Soursob and Romulea rosea Onion-grass. E.
erecta grows all year and I remove it by hand-pulling, while Onion-grass
and Soursob are dormant in summer and can be controlled from late winter to
spring. Pulling these geophytes leaves bits behind so they must be dug up
carefully (this isn’t viable with Soursob which has many easily-dislodged
bulbils), solarised (covering and heating soil) or sprayed carefully with glyphosate.
I try to minimise spraying since damaging our first Passionfruit vine. In the first
winter and spring, drifts of iris volunteers, including Freesia, Gladiolus,
Ixia and Sparaxis, emerged from dormancy and flowered. These are all
minor environmental weeds but I have left them for now because they are
beautiful and remind me of home. My nostalgia gives me an insight into why acclimatisation
societies were formed to 'improve' the local flora and fauna and make new places more like home. Victoria’s was established in 1861 and survived only 11
years by which time many highly invasive species like rabbits were well established. The
iris species at home pose no risk because the seed can’t reach native bushland and material
I dispose of is destroyed. I may change my mind once the indigenous plants are
better established.
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| Image 2: Oxalis pes-caprae Soursob in a Melbourne nature reserve. This species can form extensive mats excluding smaller plants. | 
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| Image 3: There are squillions of Romulea rosea Onion-grass plants in Victoria making it one of the most numerous weeds. | 
There is no
legal requirement to remove many weeds because lists included in legislation in
Australia seems less comprehensive than in South Africa and states (= provinces)
have their own legislation. In Victoria the primary legislation dealing with
weeds is the Catchment and Land Protection Act (1994) in terms of which weeds
can be declared as ‘noxious’ because they may cause environmental or economic
harm. There are four categories of noxious weeds and listed plants are
classified into one of the categories for each catchment region. Many weeds
that threaten the environment are not listed because they may have values in
other contexts or the legislation has not kept pace with the threat on the
ground.
The federal (= national) government has identified 32 priority species, referred to as Weeds of National
Significance (WONS). The WONS were selected in consultation with state
governments based on their invasiveness, potential for spread and
environmental, social and economic impacts and whether they can be successfully
managed. Included are six South African Asparagus species, two
subspecies of Chrysanthemoides monilifera, Lycium ferocissimum, Senecio
madagascariensis, and Vachellia
nilotica (= Acacia nilotica). Australians call V. nilotica, which
is a serious weed in semi-arid parts of the country, Prickly Acacia. This seems
a poor name given it fits most African acacia species, the spines are
technically not prickles and many Australian wattles have ‘spiny’ modified
phyllodes and stipules.
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| Image 4: Bridal Creeper (Asparagus asparagoides) with ripe fruit and starting to die back in November. | 
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| Image 5: River Red-gum in Plains Grassy Woodland. The understorey is almost 100% Phalaris aquatica, a grass species from Southern Europe which is invasive in Australia and South Africa. | 
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| Image 8: Fairy Crassula on a road verge growing with Mini Pine Tree uprooted and placed on a fence. Pieces will eventually drop to the ground and root again. | 
When
Covid-19 permits, my work includes monitoring sites established to offset
native vegetation losses across the State. I also provide management advice to
landowners. By 2008 at least 50% of Victoria’s native vegetation had been
cleared of alien species and in some fertile areas only 0.1% of the original vegetation remains.
About 4000 ha of native vegetation is still lost every year and current drivers
include land clearing for settlement and conversion of native pastures to
croplands. Overall rates of vegetation loss have slowed as new regulations have
been introduced with the policy objective of no net loss of biodiversity due to
the destruction of native vegetation. Regulations requiring that unavoidable
native vegetation loss is offset are included in all planning schemes.
Applicants for permits can create offsets on their own properties or purchase
credits from a register. Offsets are established in perpetuity and must be
managed in terms of an agreement that includes a management plan. Payments are
made annually to compliant offset site owners for 10 years (by which time the native
vegetation condition has in theory improved to maintenance levels) to fund the
management and compensate for forgoing other land-uses.
One of the
most widespread and commonly seen woody weeds on offset sites is Lycium
ferocissimum African Box-thorn. Besides displacing native vegetation, this
species provides harbour for rabbits and foxes and food for foxes. On one
coastal site that I visited, mature plants of Polygala myrtifolia
Polygala had been controlled to low numbers but there were still hundreds of
little seedlings to be removed. Two commonly encountered South African daisies
are Arctotheca calendula Capeweed and Gazania linearis Gazania, with
the latter more often seen around habitation although also spreading into
natural areas.
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| Image 10: Capeweed can be abundant on abandoned farmland and in less disturbed sites. Here creating a Namaqualand-like scene in county Victoria | 
With so many species to eliminate or control and the usual resource limitations, it helps to know what risk each species poses in order to focus management and get the best return on investment. A state-wide risk rating has been determined for each taxon based mainly on the stage of the invasion process (i.e. how much further it may spread), rate of spread and impact on native ecosystems. The list will be updated as new taxa become weedy, more information becomes available and environmental conditions change. For example, Tecomaria capensis Cape Honeysuckle has established at a handful of sites around Melbourne and in the east of Victoria. It was recently found about 100 km west of Melbourne by a natural resource management crew employed under the State’s Covid-19 relief programme. While the species is considered to be ‘currently non-invasive’, plants will be treated as a precaution.
When I
provide advice at sites, I use the list to focus work on the species that pose
the most threat. Interestingly, many of the listed species are Victorian or
Australian weeds that have expanded their ranges through horticulture. Perhaps
the most common are wattles and Pittosporum undulatum Sweet Pittosporum,
which is also a weed in South Africa. Many of these wattles are also weeds in
South Africa, e.g. Acacia baileyana Cootamundra Wattle, A. cyclops
Western Coastal Wattle, A. decurrens Early Black Wattle, A.
longifolia subsp. longifolia Long-leaved Wattle and A. saligna
Orange Wattle. Where the species are indigenous to Victoria (as opposed to other
states), a conservation work exemption is required for their removal as they are
classified as native vegetation. Determining the original range of these
species can be tricky and the regulations aim to minimise unwarranted removal. I
don’t recall as many South African plants being considered weeds outside of
their natural ranges (the term extralimital is sometimes used).
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| Image 11: Long-leaved Wattle is very common in the Grampians National Park where it displaces the native understorey plants. | 
In
conclusion, for many species and areas the weed problem seems insurmountable
and on-ground control works appear inadequate. There is nothing like South
Africa’s world-renowned Working for Water programme, for example. A lot of the
work seems to be done by community groups and private landowners with adjacent
state land often less well managed. The legislation only deals with a small subset of
weeds. On the other hand, there are very good resources for identifying weeds,
describing best-practice control and for prioritising management efforts and I think
South Africa could improve in these areas. It is also my impression that biosecurity
is taken much more seriously here and more effort is made to prevent
potentially invasive organisms from establishing and spreading. This is a very
wise investment strategy at any scale, country, state or site, as Benjamin
Franklin said: “an ounce of intervention is worth a pound of cure”.
References
used
Department
of Jobs, Precincts and Regions, 2020, Consolidated lists of declared
noxious weeds and pest animals, https://agriculture.vic.gov.au/biosecurity/protecting-victoria/legislation-policy-and-permits/consolidated-lists-of-declared-noxious-weeds-and-pest-animals
(accessed 2 November 2020)
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, 2017, Protecting Victoria's Environment – Biodiversity 2037, https://www.environment.vic.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0022/51259/Protecting-Victorias-Environment-Biodiversity-2037.pdf (Accessed 2 November 2011)
Department
of Land, Environment, Water and Planning, 2020, Native Vegetation,https://www.environment.vic.gov.au/native-vegetation/native-vegetation
(accessed 2 November 2020)
Department
of Land, Environment, Water and Planning, 2020, Early Invader Weeds Update
Issue #20, Friends of WESI: Weeds at the Early Stage of Invasion Project, https://www.environment.vic.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0024/491307/Early-Invader-Weeds-Update_Winter_20_2020.pdf (accessed 2 November 2020)
Hirsch, H.,
Allsopp, M.H., Canavan, S., Cheek, M., Geerts, S., Geldenhuys, C.J., Harding,
G., Hurley, B.P., Jones, W., Keet, J., Klein, H., Ruwanza, S., Van Wilgen, B.W.,
Wingfield, M.J. & Richardson, D.M., 2019, Eucalyptus camaldulensis
in South Africa – past, present, future, Transactions of the Royal Society
of South Africa, DOI: 10.1080/0035919X.2019.1669732
Museums Victoria, Acclimatisation Society of Victoria,
https://collections.museumsvictoria.com.au/articles/1803
(accessed 2 November 2020)
Office of Environment and Heritage, 2013, Asparagus weeds management manual: current management and control options for asparagus weeds Asparagus spp. in Australia, Office of Environment and Heritage (NSW), Sydney.
Weeds
Australia, 2020, Weeds of National Significance (WONS), https://weeds.org.au/weeds-profiles/ (accessed 2 November 2020)
White, M.,
Cheal, D., Carr, G. W., Adair, R., Blood, K. and Meagher, D., (2018), Advisory
list of environmental weeds in Victoria, Arthur Rylah Institute for
Environmental Research Technical Report Series No. 287. Department of
Environment, Land, Water and Planning, Heidelberg, Victoria. 
Wilson, E.O., 1992, The Diversity of Life, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Woinarski, J.C.Z., Burbidge, A.A. & Harrison P.L., 2015, Ongoing unravelling of a continental fauna: Decline and extinction of Australian mammals since European settlement, PNAS Vol. 112 no. 15 4531–4540.
[1] Common names in this article are
those usually used for the weeds in Victoria, Australia.



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