Invasion of the Giant Hogweed and the Sosnowsky’s Hogweed as a Multidisciplinary Problem with Unknown Future—A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Review of Articles Sorted into Research Areas
3.1.1. Dispersal of the Caucasian Hogweeds
3.1.2. How Did Caucasian Endemic Plants Become a Widespread Invasion?
3.1.3. Biochemistry of Invasive Caucasian Hogweeds
Chemical Compounds | H. mantegazzianum | H. sosnowskyi | References |
---|---|---|---|
Phenol contents | Leaves, seeds, stem, roots. | Mainly in leaves. | Synowiec and Kalemba, 2015 [103] |
Essential oils from seeds | 4-Hexen-1-ol, acetate; Hexyl 3-methyl-2-butenoate; Octyl butyrate; Octyl valerate; Octadecanoic acid; 1-Tetracosanol. | Acetic acid, octyl ester; Butanoic acid, 3-Methyl-, hexyl ester; 1,11-Dodecadiene. | Jakubska-Busse, Śliwiński and Kobyłka, 2013 [3] |
Furanocoumarins from fruits | Angelicin; pimpinellin; imperatorin; phellopterin; xanthotoxin; isopimpinellin; bergapten [115]. | Isopimpinellin; isobergapten; pimpinellin; bergapten; angelicin; imperatorin; psoralen; methoxsalen [109]. | Politowicz, Gębarowska, Proćków, Pietr and Szumny, 2017 [109]; Walasek, Grzegorczyk, Malm and Skalicka-Woźniak, 2015 [115] |
3.1.4. The Properties of Caucasian Hogweeds in the Life of Animals
3.1.5. The Meaning of Caucasian Hogweeds for Habitats and Soil Science
Study Group, Attribute | Description | Weed | References |
---|---|---|---|
Nutrient pools in the topsoil and the standing biomass | H. mantegazzianum contributed to soil homogenization through enhanced nutrient uptake. | HM | Dassonville, Vanderhoeven, Vanparys, Hayez, Gruber and Meerts, 2008 [216] |
Soil properties | H. mantegazzianum slowed down soil organic matter. | HM | Koutika, Vanderhoeven, Chapuis-Lardy, Dassonville and Meerts, 2007 [219] |
Soil chemical and biological characteristics | H. mantegazzianum affected the composition of soil microbial communities, soil conductivity, and light availability of sites. | HM | Jandová, Klinerová, Müllerová, Pyšek, Pergl, Cajthaml and Dostál, 2014 [212] |
Microbial community | Activity of soil microbial community decreased in soils under the invasive H. mantegazzianum. | HM | Bobulská, Demková, Cerevková and Renčo, 2019 [215] |
Actinomycetes in the soil | An increase in genus and species diversity of actinomycetes in soil under H. sosnowskyi was noted along with intensive organic matter mineralization. | HS | Tovstik, Shirokikh, Soloveva, Shirokikh, Ashikhmina and Savinykh, 2018 [225] |
Soil microbial properties, nematode communities | Soil microbial and nematode communities were altered by the invasion of H. sosnowskyi. | HS | Čerevková, Ivashchenko, Miklisová, Ananyeva and Renčo, 2020 [187] |
Soil nematode communities | Nematode abundance and species diversity were lower in habitas with H. sosnowskyi. | HS | Renčo and Baležentiené, 2015 [184] |
Soil nematode communities | Invasion, although not a single H. sosnowskyi changed plant species composition and negatively affected nematodes. | HS | Renčo, Kornobis, Domaradzki, Jakubska-Busse, Jurová and Homolová, 2018 [185] |
Plants and soil nematodes in the riparian habitats | H. mantegazzianum increased soil pH, decreased carbon and nitrogen content, reduced the coverage of the native plants, and negatively influenced nematodes. | HM | Renčo, Jurová, Gömöryová and Čerevková, 2021 [186] |
Soil yeast communities | Under H. sosnowskyi were less ascomycetes Candida vartiovaarae, Wickerhamomyces anomalus, although more yeast-like fungi with high hydrolytic activity: Trichosporon moniliforme, T. porosum. | HS | Glushakova, Kachalkin and Chernov, 2015 [213] |
Soil yeast | The share of yeast-like Trichosporon fungi with high hydrolytic activity was higher in the soil under H. sosnowskyi. | HS | Glushakova, Kachalkin and Chernov, 2015 [214] |
Mycobiota: e.g., Phloeospora heraclei, Septoria heracleicola, Ramularia heraclei | H. mantegazzianum was related to specific fungal pathogens. | HM | Seier and Evans, 2007 [224] |
Mycobiota | Remarkable mycodiversity of different genera and species on dead stems of H. mantegazzianum. | HM | Feige and Ale-Agha, 2004 [217] |
Mycobiota: ascomycetes, genus Periconia | A new species Periconia pseudobyssoides was collected on dead H. sosnowskyi stalks. | HS | Markovskaja and Kačergius, 2014 [222] |
Soil ecosystem, plant community | H. sosnowskyi contributed to the preservation and maintenance of soil fertility due to the annual return of fast mineralized plant material. | HS | Lapteva, Zakhozhiy, Dalke, Smotrina and Genrikh, 2021 [221] |
Soil seed bank communities | Seed banks containing H. mantegazzianum were dominated by seeds of a few agricultural weed species. | HM | Gioria and Osborne, 2010 [218] |
Seed bank, vascular plants | H. mantegazzianum decreased the diversity of seed bank communities. | HM | Gioria and Osborne, 2009 [196] |
Plant community | H. sosnowskyi used its allelochemicals to inhibit germination of perennial ryegrass (monocots) and winter rapeseed (dicots). | HS | Baležentiene, 2013 [194] |
Plant community | H. sosnowskyi is an agriophyte species and a minor flora component under the conditions of Middle Urals. | HS | Tretyakova, 2011 [198] |
Plant community | H. mantegazzianum became a dominant in invaded ecosystems. | HM | Callaway and Hierro, 2006 [195] |
Plant community | H. mantegazzianum decreased species diversity of plants in riparian habitats. | HM | Pyšek and Prach, 1993 [197] |
Insecta: Hemiptera, aphids | Positive relationship between the relative H. mantegazzianum growth, ant activity, and the number of myrmecophilic aphids, although negative impact of hogweeds on non-myrmecophilic aphids. | HM | Hansen, Hattendorf, Nentwig and 2006, [164] |
Insecta: Hymenoptera, Formicidae | H. mantegazzianum was found to be attractive to ants. | HM | Stukalyuk, Zhuravlev, Netsvetov and Kozyr, 2019 [188] |
Insecta: Lepidoptera, Depressariidae, Agonopterix caucasiella | It lives in Caucasus, the larvae feed on H. mantegazzianum. | HM | Karsholt, Lvovsky and Nielsen, 2005 [175] |
Insecta: Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera | Specific herbivorous insects were related to H. mantegazzianum. | HM | Hansen, Hattendorf, Nielsen, Wittenberg and Nentwig, 2007 [169] |
Insecta: Diptera, Psilidae, Chamaepsila rosae * | H. mantegazzianum was described as a new host of the carrot fly. | HM | Hardman and Ellis, 1982 [174] |
Insecta, Diptera, Drosophilidae | Drosophila species, Scaptomyza pallida, used the petioles of H. mantegazzianum with the parasitoid Leptopilina australis. | HM | van Alphen, Nordlander and Eijs, 1991 [176] |
Insecta: pollinators | H. mantegazzianum sites had a lower abundance of solitary bees and hoverflies. | HM | Davis, Kelly, Maggs and Stout, 2018 [172] |
Insecta: pollinators | Very few insects carried both native and alien pollen from H. sphondylium or H. mantegazzianum, suggesting species barrier to gene flow. | HM | Grace and Nelson, 1981 [168] |
Insecta: pollinators | Pollinators’ visitation of Mimulus guttatus was enhanced close to H. mantegazzianum. | HM | Nielsen, Heimes and Kollmann, 2008 [170] |
Insecta: pollinators | Sixty-nine species of anthophilous insects visiting inflorescences of H. sosnowskyi were identified. | HS | Ustinova, Savina and Lysenkov, 2017 [171] |
Bird community | Ground dwellers and farmland birds responded negatively to H. sosnowskyi towards open habitats, while a more negative response towards forest habitats was observed in birds associated with bushes. | HS | Grzędzicka and Reif, 2020 [189] |
Bird guilds | H. sosnowskyi decreased the abundance of insectivorous, granivorous and omnivorous birds. | HS | Grzędzicka and Reif, 2021 [190] |
Biodiversity, ecosystems | H. mantegazzianum negatively impacted biodiversity and ecosystems. | HM | Koutika, Rainey and Dassonville, 2011 [220] |
4. Discussion
4.1. The Unknown Future of Caucasian Hogweeds
4.2. The Need for Further Studies
- This review showed how little research has been available on the impact of Caucasian hogweeds on biodiversity. It is a serious oversight that the author would like to emphasize and suggest this research direction for scientists interested in conservation biology and invasion science. Possible adaptations of native organisms to invasive Caucasian hogweeds are worth studying.
- Nowadays, pollinators decline is observed, which concerns the mass extinction of species, of particular importance for food security and the future of humanity. Caucasian hogweeds stand out from other invasive plants as species especially attractive for pollinators. In the case of high costs and difficulties with the removal of those invaders, it seems that instead of incurring endless losses for this process, it is worth starting to research the importance of hogweeds for local pollinator communities, with particular emphasis on the European honeybees. Although Caucasian hogweeds were once used as valuable melliferous plants, there is no research on the properties of honey prepared from products collected by pollinators on these plants.
- Eastern Europe is a mainstay of farmland birds that are legally protected in the European Union, and this group also includes many endangered and protected species. Research on the effects of invasive hogweeds on birds only began a few years ago, which may be a very serious oversight. There is an urgent need to start long-term research based on large-scale analyses at the level of at least the European continent, which would compare the spreading process of invaders with the trends of changes in the abundance and distribution of farmland birds over the same period. In recent years, ornithologists have become interested in the significance of environmental elements remaining after the communist era, such as military areas, abandoned farms, or the way land was partitioned at that time. No research has shown the role of Caucasian hogweeds occurring in these areas.
- The history of the Caucasian hogweeds invasion has lasted for at least 80 years, assuming that the real problem of invasion, at least on a continental scale, began with the fall of communism and the abandonment of widely distributed former crops. Thus far, research has shown native organisms facing this invasion to react at the phenotypic level. In the coming decades, research should be planned to check whether the described invasion already causes variability in organisms at the genotypic level. For comparison, the phenomenon of urbanization, which has lasted for 200 years, has already caused many changes in organisms at the genotypic level. The very large ranges of invasive hogweeds have the potential for the research of geneticists dealing with large-scale genetic variation in organisms.
- There is a lack of research on the effects of global warming and extreme weather events on the dispersal of invaders and their reproductive success. It is not known what effect mild winters have on Caucasian hogweeds populations and seed survival in soil. Increasingly frequent floods potentially favor the dispersal of hogweeds, thus it seems that especially in river valleys, management of this invasion requires a specific strategy supported by scientific research, e.g., large-scale dispersal modeling in the context of the water flow rate in the particular river and the extent of the floods. The high temperatures during increasingly hotter summer periods on the European continent may favor the more intense release of hogweeds chemicals into the environment, thus far not explored.
- There is a lack of experimental studies showing what the main drivers of the Caucasian hogweeds invasion are. It should be emphasized that sometimes birds are considered to be one of the drivers facilitating the invaders’ spread. This has not been tested experimentally, and it is not known if any bird species have invasive hogweeds seeds in their diets. It is not known whether and how the birds contribute to the dispersal of Caucasian hogweeds.
- One of the unexplored invasion drivers may be habitat degradation that lowers the local biodiversity and potentially facilitates the spread and development of invasive plants. On the one hand, invaders may appear in disturbed habitats, and on the other hand, procedures related to their removal may have a negative impact on the surrounding environment, paradoxically facilitating invaders. It is not known what the balance between habitat disturbance and native biodiversity should be kept to prevent the development of invaders.
- The complex attractiveness of Caucasian hogweeds to certain groups of organisms requires further research. An example is the interest of ants in those plants. Ants perform many useful functions in nature, e.g., sanitary. It is worth carefully examining the relationship of ants with hogweeds and checking whether other organisms appearing in the invasive hogweeds indirectly benefit from it.
- Research on the influence of Caucasian hogweeds on ecosystems has been related to soil science. The unique composition of communities of soil organisms in the substrate of growing invaders seems to be an interesting research topic for environmental biologists interested in soil ecology. The influence of hogweeds on soil organisms goes beyond the phenomenon of only chemical allelopathy, which requires further experimental studies.
- The dispersal of Caucasian hogweeds related to linear features such as rivers and roads is worth exploring on a landscape scale. Today, roadless areas are becoming rarer. There are no spatial analyses showing what this means for the Caucasian invaders’ dispersal.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Areas | Classification Criteria |
---|---|
Agricultural sciences | Agrotechnical research on the importance of hogweeds as crops and their role for biological methods of crops removal and protection. |
Biochemistry | Biochemical studies that explained the chemical composition of hogweeds and the possible uses of hogweeds chemicals. |
Biodiversity | Research on various community compositions near hogweeds, information on new species appearing on hogweeds, research showing the potential for depletion, and other ecosystem modifications affecting biodiversity associated with Caucasian hogweeds. |
Dispersal | Articles describing the distribution, spreading and working with tools enabling detection and dispersal monitoring of invasive hogweeds. |
Environmental sciences | The effects of temperature, snow cover, and other elements of the environment on hogweeds. |
Genetics | Research on hogweeds genetics–the appearance of hybrids with aliens and natives, genetic differences between aliens from native and invasive ranges. |
Invasion control | Articles describing methods of Caucasian hogweeds removal and effects of their eradication. |
Mathematics | Analysis used in bioeconomy. |
Plant ecology | Mechanisms of the influence of Caucasian hogweeds on other plants explaining details of their allelopathic and similar properties, e.g., conducted in common garden experiments, based on studying fruits and seed production, etc. |
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Share and Cite
Grzędzicka, E. Invasion of the Giant Hogweed and the Sosnowsky’s Hogweed as a Multidisciplinary Problem with Unknown Future—A Review. Earth 2022, 3, 287-312. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010018
Grzędzicka E. Invasion of the Giant Hogweed and the Sosnowsky’s Hogweed as a Multidisciplinary Problem with Unknown Future—A Review. Earth. 2022; 3(1):287-312. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010018
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrzędzicka, Emilia. 2022. "Invasion of the Giant Hogweed and the Sosnowsky’s Hogweed as a Multidisciplinary Problem with Unknown Future—A Review" Earth 3, no. 1: 287-312. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010018
APA StyleGrzędzicka, E. (2022). Invasion of the Giant Hogweed and the Sosnowsky’s Hogweed as a Multidisciplinary Problem with Unknown Future—A Review. Earth, 3(1), 287-312. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010018