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Crofton weed biocontrol

Citation

Australian BioControl Hub (2023). Crofton weed biocontrol. Occurrence dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/26b7mh accessed via GBIF.org on 2025-07-18.

Description

Ageratina adenophora Crofton weed Crofton weed is a rapid-spreading weed that is invasive in many areas along the eastern coast of Australia, particularly cleared land that is not grazed (such as public reserves). Crofton weed reduces the carrying capacity of grazing land and restricts movement of stock and machinery. It is unpalatable to cattle, and poisonous to horses. Biological control is believed to be the only viable option to reduce dense infestations of Crofton weed, particularly in areas of mainland Australia and Lord Howe Island that are difficult to access. Three biocontrol agents have been released to control Crofton weed: 1. Crofton weed rust fungus Baeodromus eupatorii 2. Crofton weed leaf-spot fungus Passalora ageratinae 3. Crofton weed gall fly Procecidochares utilis The combined effects of these three biocontrol agents are expected to reduce the growth and spread of the weed in Australia. The most recent agent, the rust fungus, was released in 2015 and 2016 at close to 250 sites in NSW and south-east Queensland. The rust fungus was confirmed as established at 59% of these sites within 6-12 months after releases. To enhance natural spread, community members may consider redistributing the rust fungus to sites where it is absent. Step-by-step guides (see the Resources tab) are available to facilitate releases of the rust fungus and to monitor release sites for establishment and impact of the rust. Once established in an area, rust spores are easily redistributed by wind to nearby Crofton weed infestations, facilitating the spread of this agent. The CSIRO's Crofton weed research page provides further information on past research, or check the Blog page for updates on news and events.

Purpose

Sampling Description

Quality Control

Crofton weed gall fly data quality description: Crofton weed leaf-spot fungus data quality description: Data quality assurance methods: subjectexpertverification Crofton weed rust fungus data quality description: Data quality assurance methods: subjectexpertverification

Method steps

  1. Crofton weed gall fly method: Crofton weed leaf-spot fungus method: opportunistic Opportunistic/ad-hoc observation recording Crofton weed rust fungus method:

Taxonomic Coverages

Geographic Coverages

Bibliographic Citations

Contacts

originator
BioCollect
metadata author
BioCollect
distributor
Atlas of Living Australia
CSIRO Ecosystems Services
Canberra
2601
ACT
AU
email: info@ala.org.au
administrative point of contact
Atlas of Living Australia
CSIRO Ecosystems Services
Canberra
2601
ACT
AU
email: info@ala.org.au
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