Spread and impact of introduced conifers in South America: Lessons from other southern hemisphere regions
Artículo
![Thumbnail](/themes/Mirage2/images/cubierta.jpg)
Open/ Download
Publication date
2009-08Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Simberloff, Daniel
Cómo citar
Spread and impact of introduced conifers in South America: Lessons from other southern hemisphere regions
Author
Abstract
The history of conifers introduced earlier elsewhere in the southern hemisphere suggests that recent
invasions in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay are likely to increase in number and size. In South Africa, New
Zealand and Australia, early ornamental introductions and small forestry plantations did not lead to large-scale
invasions, while subsequent large plantations were followed with a lag of about 20–30 years by troublesome
invasions. Large-scale conifer plantation forestry in South America began about 50–80 years later than in South
Africa, Australia and New Zealand, while reports of invasions in South America lagged behind those in the latter
nations by a century. Impacts of invading non-native conifers outside South America are varied and include
replacement of grassland and shrubland by conifer forest, alteration of fire and hydrological regimes, modification
of soil nutrients, and changes in aboveground and belowground biotic communities. Several of these effects have
already been detected in various parts of South America undergoing conifer invasion. The sheer amount of area
planted in conifers is already very large in Chile and growing rapidly in Argentina and Brazil. This mass of
reproductive trees, in turn, produces an enormous propagule pressure that may accelerate ongoing invasions and
spark new ones at an increasing rate. Regulations to control conifer invasions, including measures to mitigate
spread, were belatedly implemented in New Zealand and South Africa, as well as in certain Australian states,
inspired by observations on invasions in those nations. Regulations in South America are weaker and piecemeal, but
the existing research base on conifer invasions elsewhere could be useful in fashioning effective regulations in South
America. Pressure from foreign customers in South Africa has led most companies there to seek certification
through the Forestry Stewardship Council; a similar programme operates in Australia. Such an approach may be
promising in South America.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Participation of D. Simberloff and M. A. Nuñez in this
project was supported by the Nancy Gore Hunger
Professorship at the University ofTennessee and NSF
Grant DEB-0709644. D. Richardson and B. van
Wilgen acknowledge support from the DST-NRF
Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology (South
Africa). A. Pauchard and R. O. Bustamante acknowledge
support from the Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity
(IEB) project ICM – P05-002 and Conicyt
PFB-23.
Quote Item
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Volume: 35, Issue: 5, Pages: 489-504, 2010
Collections