Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T13:46:05.793Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Distribution and impact of invasive alien plant species in Bardia National Park, western Nepal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2020

Suneeta Bhatta
Affiliation:
Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University, Kirtipur, Kathmandu, Nepal
Laxmi Raj Joshi
Affiliation:
National Trust for Nature Conservation, Bardia Conservation Program, Bardia, Nepal
Bharat Babu Shrestha*
Affiliation:
Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University, Kirtipur, Kathmandu, Nepal
*
Author for correspondence: Dr Bharat Babu Shrestha, Email: bb.shrestha@cdbtu.edu.np

Summary

Invasive alien plant species (IAPS) are spreading into protected areas worldwide; however, knowledge of these invasions and their impacts in Nepal’s protected areas is poor. Here, the spatial distribution pattern of IAPS in Bardia National Park (BNP), Nepal, was analysed using roadside surveys and grid sampling. The impacts of the most abundant IAPS, Lantana camara, on plant communities were analysed by comparing 60 pairs of non-invaded and invaded quadrats. Twelve IAPS, including two of the most prolific species globally, L. camara and Chromolaena odorata, were recorded from BNP. The Karnali floodplain in the south-western region of the park, a prime habitat of one-horned rhinoceros, was highly invaded by the IAPS. Tree canopy and distance to road, river and settlement were the major factors affecting IAPS occurrence. Lantana camara modified plant community structure and significantly reduced plant species richness and diversity; species richness of native plants was reduced to less than half in invaded plots. Plant invasions and impacts on native plant diversity have been increasing in BNP. We recommend management interventions involving immediate eradication of C. odorata and other species with single satellite populations and control measures for other widespread species such as L. camara and Ageratum houstonianum.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Foundation for Environmental Conservation

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, LG, Rocliffe, S, Haddaway, NR, Dunn, AM (2015) The role of tourism and recreation in the spread of non-native species: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One 10: e0140833.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arellano-Cataldo, G, Smith-Ramírez, C (2016) Establishment of invasive plant species in canopy gaps on Robinson Crusoe Island. Plant Ecology 217: 289302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhattarai, BR.Wright, W, Poudel, BS, Aryal, A, Yadav, BP, Wagle, R (2017) Shifting paradigms for Nepal’s protected areas: history, challenges and relationships. Journal of Mountain Science 14: 964979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, K (1997) Plain tales from the grasslands: extraction, value and utilization of biomass in Royal Bardia National Park, Nepal. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 5974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapagain, NH, Pandit, RK, Tamang, R (2016) Flowering Plants of Makawanpur. Makawanpur, Nepal: District Plant Resources Office.Google Scholar
Chaudhary, RR, Shrestha, BB, Thapa, H, Siwakoti, M (2020) Status and impacts of invasive alien plant species in Parsa National Park, central Nepal. Banko Janakari 30: 2131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christen, DC, Matlack, GR (2009) The habitat and conduit functions of roads in the spread of three invasive plant species. Biological Invasions 11: 453465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daubenmire, R (1959) A canopy-coverage method of vegetation analysis. North West Science 33: 4364.Google Scholar
Davis, KW (2011) Plant community diversity and native plant abundance decline with increasing abundance of an exotic annual grass. Oecologia 167: 481491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinerstein, E (1979) An ecological survey of the Royal-Karnali Bardia Wildlife Reserve, Nepal. Part I: Vegetation modifying factors and successional relationships. Biological Conservation 15: 127150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DNPWC (2015) Bardiya National Park and Buffer Zone Management Plan (2016–2020). Kathmandu, Nepal: Department of National Park and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC), Ministry of Forest and Soil Conservation.Google Scholar
DNPWC (2018) Annual Report 2017/2018 [Nepali]. Kathmandu, Nepal: Department of National Park and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC), Ministry of Forest and Soil Conservation.Google Scholar
DNPWC and DFSC (2018) Status of Tigers and Prey in Nepal. Kathmandu, Nepal: Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation (DNPWC) and Department of Forests and Soil Conservation (DFSC), Ministry of Forest and Environment.Google Scholar
Foxcroft, LC, Freitag-Ronaldson, S (2007) Seven decades of institutional learning: managing alien plant invasions in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Oryx 41: 160167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foxcroft, LC, Jarosik, V, Pyšek, P, Richardson, DM, Rouget, M (2011) Protected-area boundaries as filters of plant invasions. Conservation Biology 25: 400405.Google ScholarPubMed
Foxcroft, LC, Pyšek, P, Richardson, DM, Genovesi, P (2013) Plant Invasions in Protected Areas: Pattern, Problems and Challenges. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer Science+Business Media.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foxcroft, LC, Pyšek, P, Richardson, DM, Genovesi, P, MacFadyen, S (2017) Plant invasion science in protected areas: progress and priorities. Biological Invasions 19: 13531378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooden, B, French, KO, Turner, P, Downey, PO (2009) Impact threshold for an alien plant invader, Lantana camara L., on native plant communities. Biological Conservation 142: 26312641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grice, AC, Clarkson, JR, Calvert, M (2011) Geographic differentiation of management objectives for invasive species: a case study of Hymenachne amplexicaulis in Australia. Environmental Science and Policy 14: 986997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hulme, PE (2009) Trade, transport and trouble: managing invasive species pathways in the era of globalization. Journal of Applied Ecology 46: 1018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hulme, PE, Bacher, S, Kenis, M, Klotz, S, Kühn, I, Minchin, Det al. (2008) Grasping at the routes of biological invasions: a framework for integrating pathways into policy. Journal of Applied Ecology 45: 403414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hulme, PE, Pyšek, P, Pergl, J, Jarošík, V, Schaffner, U, Vilà, M (2014) Greater focus needed on alien plant impacts in protected areas. Conservation Letters 7: 459466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IPBES (2019) Summary for Policymakers of the Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). S Díaz, J Settele, ES Brondízio, HT Ngo, M Guèze, J Agard et al. eds. Bonn, Germany: IPBES Secretariat.Google Scholar
Jevon, T, Shackleton, CM (2015) Integrating local knowledge and forest surveys to assess Lantana camara impacts on indigenous species recruitment in Mazeppa Bay, South Africa. Human Ecology 43: 247254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khaniya, L, Shrestha, BB (2020) Forest regrowth reduces richness and abundance of invasive alien plant species in community managed Shorea robusta forests of central Nepal. Journal of Ecology and Environment 44: 12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leberger, R, Rosa, IM, Guerra, CA, Wolf, F, Pereira, HM (2020) Global patterns of forest loss across IUCN categories of protected areas. Biological Conservation 241: 108299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, JM (2001) Local interactions, dispersal and native and exotic plant diversity along a California stream. Oikos 95: 397408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowe, S, Browne, M, Boudjelas, S, DePoorter, M (2000) 100 of the World’s Worst Invasive Alien Species: A Selection from the Global Invasive Species Database. Auckland, New Zealand: The Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG), a specialist group of the Species Survival Commission (SSC) of the World Conservation Union (IUCN).Google Scholar
Magurran, AE (2004) Measuring Biological Diversity. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
MFSC (2014) Nepal National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan 2014–2020. Kathmandu, Nepal: Ministry of Forest and Soil Conservation (MFSC).Google Scholar
Monaco, A, Genovesi, P (2014) European Guidelines on Protected Areas and Invasive Alien Species. Rome, Italy: Council of Europe, Strasbourg, Regional Parks Agency – Lazio Region.Google Scholar
Mortensen, DA, Rauschert, ES, Nord, AN, Jones, BP (2009) Forest roads facilitate the spread of invasive plants. Invasive Plant Science and Management 2: 191199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, ST, Subedi, N, Gnawali, SR, Lamichhane, BR, Upadhyay, GP, Kock, R, Amin, R (2013) Invasive mikania in Chitwan National Park, Nepal: the threat to the greater one-horned rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis) and factors driving the invasion. Oryx 47: 361368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nath, A, Sinha, A, Lahkar, BP, Brahma, N (2019) In search of aliens: factors influencing the distribution of Chromolaena odorata L. and Mikania micrantha Kunth in the Terai grasslands of Manas National Park, India. Ecological Engineering 131: 1626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pagad, S, Genovesi, P, Carnevali, L, Schigel, D, McGeoch, MA (2018) Introducing the global register of introduced and invasive species. Scientific Data 5: 170202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Parendes, LA, Jones, JA (2000) Role of light availability and dispersal in exotic plant invasion along roads and streams in the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest, Oregon. Conservation Biology 14: 6475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pauchard, A, Kueffer, C, Dietz, H, Daehler, CC, Alexander, J, Edwards, PJet al. (2009) Ain’t no mountain high enough: plant invasions reaching new elevations. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 7: 479486.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paudel, S (2016) Diversity and Distribution of Invasive Alien Plant Species along the Road Network in Western Nepal. MSc thesis. Kathmandu, Nepal: Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University.Google Scholar
Priyanka, N, Joshi, P (2013) Modeling spatial distribution of Lantana camara – a comparative study. Canadian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences 1: 100117.Google Scholar
Pyšek, P, Richardson, DM, Rejmanek, M, Webster, GL, Williamson, M, Kirschner, J (2012) A global assessment of invasive plant impacts on resident species, communities and ecosystems: the interaction of impact measures, invading species traits and environment. Global Change Biology 18: 17251737.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
R Developmental Core Team (2016) A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna, Austria: R foundation for statistical computing.Google Scholar
Radosevich, SR, Stubbs, MM, Ghersa, CM (2003) Plant invasion – process and pattern. Weed Science 51: 254259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rajbhandari, KR, Rai, SK (2017) A Handbook of the Flowering Plants of Nepal Volume I. Kathmandu, Nepal: Department of Plant Resource.Google Scholar
Rajbhandari, KR, Thapa Magar, MS, Kandel, DR, Khanal, C (2016) Plant Resources of Kailali, Western Nepal. Kailali, Nepal: District Plant Resources Office.Google Scholar
Rodgers, JC III, Parker, KC (2003) Distribution of alien plant species in relation to human disturbance on the Georgia Sea Islands. Diversity and Distributions 9: 385398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seebens, H, Blackburn, TM, Dyer, EE, Genovesi, P, Hulme, PE, Jeschke, JM, Pagad, S (2017) No saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide. Nature Communications 8: 19.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shackleton, RT, Foxcroft, LC, Pyšek, P, Wood, LE, Richardson, DM (2020) Assessing biological invasions in protected areas after 30 years: revisiting nature reserves targeted by the 1980s SCOPE programme. Biological Conservation 243: 108424.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrestha, BB (2016) Invasive alien plant species in Nepal. In: Frontiers of Botany, eds Jha, PK, Siwakoti, M, Rajbhandary, SR, pp. 269284. Kathmandu, Nepal: Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University.Google Scholar
Shrestha, BB (2019) Management of invasive alien plant species in Nepal: current practices and future prospects. In: Tropical Ecosystems: Structure, Functions and Global Change, eds Garkoti, SC, van Bloem, S, Fule, PZ, Semwal, RL, pp. 4568. Singapore: Springer Nature.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrestha, BB, Budha, PB, Wong, LJ, Pagad, S (2018) Global register of introduced and invasive species – Nepal. Version 2.2. Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). Checklist Dataset [www document]. URL https://doi.org/10.15468/4r0kkrCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrestha, BB, Pokhrel, K, Paudel, N, Poudel, S, Shabbir, A, Adkins, SW (2019a) Distribution of Parthenium hysterophorus and one of its biological control agents (Coleoptera: Zygogramma bicolorata) in Nepal. Weed Research 59: 467478.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrestha, UB, Shrestha, BB (2019) Climate change amplifies plant invasion hotspots in Nepal. Diversity and Distributions 10: 15991612.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrestha, BB, Shrestha, UB, Sharma, KP, Thapa-Parajuli, RB, Devkota, A, Siwakoti, M (2019b) Community perception and prioritization of invasive alien plants in Chitwan-Annapurna Landscape, Nepal. Journal of Environmental Management 229: 3847.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Simberloff, D (2009) The role of propagule pressure in biological invasions. Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 4: 81102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, HP, Batish, DR, Dogra, KS, Kaur, S, Kohli, RK, Negi, A (2014) Negative effect of litter of invasive weed Lantana camara on structure and composition of vegetation in the lower Siwalik Hills, northern India. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 186: 33793389.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Siwakoti, M, Shrestha, BB, Devkota, A, Shrestha, UB, Thapaparajul RB Sharma KP (2016) Assessment of the effects of climate change on the distribution of invasive alien plant species in Nepal. In: Building Knowledge for Climate Resilience in Nepal: Research Brief, eds Bhuju, D, McLaughlin, K, Sijapati, J, Devkota, B, Shrestha, N, Ghimire, GP, Neupane, PK, pp. 58. Kathmandu, Nepal: Nepal Academy of Science and Technology.Google Scholar
Taylor, S, Kumar, L, Reid, N, Kriticos, DJ (2012). Climate change and the potential distribution of an invasive shrub, Lantana camara L. PLoS One 7: e35565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
te Beest, M, Howison, O, Howison, RA, Dew, LA, Poswa, MM, Dumalisile, Let al. (2017) Successful control of the invasive shrub Chromolaena odorata in Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park. In: Conserving Africa’s Mega-Diversity in the Anthropocene: The Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park Story, eds Cromsigt, JPGM, Archibald, S, Owen-Smith, N, pp. 358382. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thapa, S, Chapman, DS (2010) Impact of resource extraction on forest structure and diversity in Bardia National Park, Nepal. Forest Ecology and Management 259: 641649.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiwari, S, Adhikari, B, Siwakoti, M, Subedi, K (2005) An Inventory and Assessment of Invasive Alien Plant Species of Nepal. Kathmandu, Nepal: IUCN Nepal.Google Scholar
Wasowicz, P, Sennikov, AN, Westergaard, KB, Spellman, K, Carlson, M, Gillespie, LJet al. (2019) Non-native vascular flora of the Arctic: taxonomic richness, distribution and pathways. Ambio 49: 693703.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wittenberg, R, Cock, MJW, eds (2001) Invasive Alien Species: A Toolkit of Best Prevention and Management Practices. Wallingford, UK: CAB International.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Bhatta et al. supplementary material

Bhatta et al. supplementary material

Download Bhatta et al. supplementary material(File)
File 348.4 KB