Photoperiodic adaptation in Xanthium strumarium populations introduced to Australia

1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin McMillan

Seedlings derived from field-collected burs from Australia were tested for photoperiodic adaptation and morphologies. Four morphophysiological types were represented from northern Victoria to southern Queensland. The widespread chinense morphological complex (Noogoora Burr) has a critical dark period of 10.5 h. The italicum morphological complex of eastern central New South Wales has a critical dark period of 10 h. The cavanillesii morphological complex near Sydney has an apparent critical night of 9.5 h and the pensylvanicum morphological complex in northwestern Victoria has an apparent critical night of 9.25–9.5 h. Two populations in the area of sympatry of the chinense and italicum complexes showed diverse photoperiodic adaptation, ripeness-to-flower (maturity) responses and morphologies, suggesting hybridization. Although Xanthium populations have been in Australia for over 100 years, their morphophysiology matches populations in America with relatively narrow distribution.

1975 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 173 ◽  
Author(s):  
C McMillan

The Xanthium strumarium complexes have exploited ecosystems disturbed by man on all continents by virtue of a vast array of morpho-physiological differentiation. Australia, which had no indigenous populations, has been colonized by four morpho-physiological variants. The four introductions have maintained their successful adaptations through self-pollination but have produced new morpho- physiological combinations in certain floodplain habitats through hybridization of sympatric variants. The four introductions can be treated variously as members of morphological complexes: 'chinense', 'italicum', 'pennsylvanicum', and 'cavanillesii', or as members of four taxa: X. chinense Mill., X. italicum Mor., X. californicum Greene, and X. cavanillesii Schouw. The introduction of X. chinense represents a type that is photoperiodically adapted to the south- eastern United States and is similar to populations occurring on the Mississippi Delta south of New Orleans, Louisiana. This introduction in the 'chinense' complex reportedly arrived in Queensland with American cotton seed and is commonly referred to as Noogoora burr. It represents the most aggressive form of Xanthium and is widely distributed in eastern Australia from northern Victoria to Queensland and the Northern Territory. The populations of X. italicum represent a morphological form that is currently found in populations of eastern Texas, where the 'italicum' and 'chinense' complexes are sympatric, and was possibly introduced in its present intermediate morpho-physiological state. This introduction in the 'italicum' complex is photoperiodically similar to plants of central Texas and is confined to latitudes 29-33° in New South Wales. Hybrid intermediates between the populations of X. chinense and X. italicum have been detected in river floodplains of New South Wales where the two introductions are sympatric. The introduction in the 'pennsylvanicum' complex can be referred to X. californicum Greene. It represents a morpho-physiological form that occurs in northern California and may have originated in the vicinity of the San Francisco Bay. Reportedly confined in Australia to the eastern portion of South Australia and adjacent Victoria, this introduction seems to be adapted to a Mediterranean climate. Collections of Australia and California cultivated in central Texas showed poor vigour, 'stem rotting', and drying branches with no burr production. The introduction of X. cavanillesii is locally confined to the Nepean-Hawkesbury drainage north-west of Sydney and is not reported outside New South Wales. These populations of the 'cavanillesii' complex represent the morphological form that is indigenous to South America and may have originated in the vicinity of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Although the origins of Xanthium in Australia are not documented, they were probably accidentally introduced with cotton seed (X. chinense), in animal fur (X. italicum, X. cavanillesii) and with grape stock (X . Californicum). The morpho-physiological range of the four introductions represents a very small part of the total adaptive range within the eight complexes of X. strumarium and could be expanded by subsequent arrivals from other continents.


1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glen Saunders ◽  
David Choquenot ◽  
John McIlroy ◽  
Rossanne Packwood

Quarterly spotlight counts of rabbits were conducted at three sites in central-western New South Wales. These counts commenced two years before the arrival of rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD) in the winter of 1996. The existing data on quarterly rates of change in rabbit abundance for the three populations provided a unique opportunity to study the effects of RHD on rabbit demography. Prior to the arrival of RHD, all three populations underwent phases of sequential increase and decrease in each year. On the basis of these patterns, RHD had a variable influence on the demography of the three rabbit populations. In 1996–97, the density of two populations declined over an expected period of increase, while at the third site the density increased as expected from pre-RHD patterns. Twelve months after their failure to generate expected positive rates of increase the two affected populations had returned to the normal sequence of increases and decreases in density although still at comparatively low numbers.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document