Pacific Island Ecosystems at Risk (PIER)
RISK ASSESSMENT RESULTS: High risk, score: 11
Australian/New Zealand Weed Risk Assessment adapted for Hawai‘i. Information on Risk Assessments Original risk assessment |
Thunbergia laurifolia Lindl. Family - Acanthaceae . Common Names(s) -(babbler's-vine, malayische Thunbergie, laurel clockvine, blue thunbergia, blue trumpet vine, laurel clock vine, purple allamanda) . Synonym(s) - Thunbergia grandiflora var. laurifolia (Lindl.) Benoist. |
Answer |
Score |
||
1.01 |
Is the species highly domesticated? |
y=-3, n=0 |
n |
0 |
1.02 |
Has the species become naturalized where grown? |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
1.03 |
Does the species have weedy races? |
y=-1, n=-1 |
||
2.01 |
Species suited to tropical or subtropical climate(s) (0-low; 1-intermediate; 2-high) – If island is primarily wet habitat, then substitute “wet tropical” for “tropical or subtropical” |
See Append 2 |
2 |
|
2.02 |
Quality of climate match data (0-low; 1-intermediate; 2-high) see appendix 2 |
2 |
||
2.03 |
Broad climate suitability (environmental versatility) |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
2.04 |
Native or naturalized in regions with tropical or subtropical climates |
y=1, n=0 |
y |
1 |
2.05 |
Does the species have a history of repeated introductions outside its natural range? |
y=-2, ?=-1, n=0 |
y |
|
3.01 |
Naturalized beyond native range y = 1*multiplier (see Append 2), n= question 2.05 |
y |
2 |
|
3.02 |
Garden/amenity/disturbance weed y = 1*multiplier (see Append 2) |
n=0 |
||
3.03 |
Agricultural/forestry/horticultural weed y = 2*multiplier (see Append 2) |
n=0 |
||
3.04 |
Environmental weed y = 2*multiplier (see Append 2) |
n=0 |
y |
4 |
3.05 |
Congeneric weed y = 1*multiplier (see Append 2) |
n=0 |
y |
2 |
4.01 |
Produces spines, thorns or burrs |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.02 |
Allelopathic |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.03 |
Parasitic |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.04 |
Unpalatable to grazing animals |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
4.05 |
Toxic to animals |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.06 |
Host for recognized pests and pathogens |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.07 |
Causes allergies or is otherwise toxic to humans |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.08 |
Creates a fire hazard in natural ecosystems |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.09 |
Is a shade tolerant plant at some stage of its life cycle |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.10 |
Tolerates a wide range of soil conditions (or limestone conditions if not a volcanic island) |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
4.11 |
Climbing or smothering growth habit |
y=1, n=0 |
y |
1 |
4.12 |
Forms dense thickets |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
5.01 |
Aquatic |
y=5, n=0 |
n |
0 |
5.02 |
Grass |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
5.03 |
Nitrogen fixing woody plant |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
5.04 |
Geophyte (herbaceous with underground storage organs -- bulbs, corms, or tubers) |
y=1, n=0 |
y |
1 |
6.01 |
Evidence of substantial reproductive failure in native habitat |
y=1, n=0 |
n |
0 |
6.02 |
Produces viable seed. |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
6.03 |
Hybridizes naturally |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
6.04 |
Self-compatible or apomictic |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
6.05 |
Requires specialist pollinators |
y=-1, n=0 |
||
6.06 |
Reproduction by vegetative fragmentation |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
6.07 |
Minimum generative time (years) 1 year = 1, 2 or 3 years = 0, 4+ years = -1 |
See left |
||
7.01 |
Propagules likely to be dispersed unintentionally (plants growing in heavily trafficked areas) |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
7.02 |
Propagules dispersed intentionally by people |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
7.03 |
Propagules likely to disperse as a produce contaminant |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
7.04 |
Propagules adapted to wind dispersal |
y=1, n=-1 |
n |
-1 |
7.05 |
Propagules water dispersed |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
7.06 |
Propagules bird dispersed |
y=1, n=-1 |
n |
-1 |
7.07 |
Propagules dispersed by other animals (externally) |
y=1, n=-1 |
n |
-1 |
7.08 |
Propagules survive passage through the gut |
y=1, n=-1 |
n |
-1 |
8.01 |
Prolific seed production (>1000/m2) |
y=1, n=-1 |
n |
-1 |
8.02 |
Evidence that a persistent propagule bank is formed (>1 yr) |
y=1, n=-1 |
||
8.03 |
Well controlled by herbicides |
y=-1, n=1 |
y |
-1 |
8.04 |
Tolerates, or benefits from, mutilation, cultivation, or fire |
y=1, n=-1 |
y |
1 |
8.05 |
Effective natural enemies present locally (e.g. introduced biocontrol agents) |
y=-1, n=1 |
||
Total score: |
11 |
Supporting data:
Notes |
Source |
|
1.01 |
(1) No evidence of domestication. |
|
1.02 |
||
1.03 |
||
2.01 |
(1) Native to Asia temperate: China, Taiwan; Asia tropical: Indochina, Malaysia (2) Native to India |
(1) http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?36609 (2) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
2.02 |
(1) Native to Asia temperate: China, Taiwan; Asia tropical: Indochina, Malaysia (2) Native to India |
(1) http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?36609 (2) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
2.03 |
(1) USDA zone 10a - 11. (2) Sparingly naturalized along roadsides 0-300 m. Tahiti, Naturalized along one roadside 800-850 m Viti Levu (Fiji). |
(1) http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/88310/ (2) http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:gn8ww-5_Ik0J:www.blackwellpublishing.com/products/journals/suppmat/DDI/DDI094/DDI094AppendixS2.doc+thunbergia+laurifolia+%2B+%22elevation%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3&gl=us [Cited 2008 Oct 15]. |
2.04 |
(1) Native to Asia temperate: China, Taiwan; Asia tropical: Indochina, Malayasia |
(1) http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?36609 |
2.05 |
(1) Introduced to Australia, Fiji, French Polynesia, Hawaii |
(1) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
3.01 |
(1) Naturalized populations were observed in Wailua, Honomanu, and Kokomo, Maui. (2) Naturalized in Fiji, French Polynesia, Hawaii, invasive in Australia. |
(1) http://www.hear.org/starr/hiplants/reports/pdf/thunbergia_laurifolia.pdf (2) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
3.02 |
(1) Found along forest trails or edges of urban gardens. |
(1) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
3.03 |
No evidence. |
|
3.04 |
(1) On the alert list for environmental weeds in Australia. (2) Considered a significant environmental weed in the Northern Territory, Australia |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf (2) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
3.05 |
(1) Thunbergia grandiflora is a serious weed in Australia. (2) Noxious weed in Australia. Escaped from cultivation in Florida, Hawaii, Australia and Singapore. |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf (2) http://209.85.173.104/custom?q=cache:jm5nxaM_V4QJ:www.hear.org/Pier/pdf/pohreports/thunbergia_grandiflora.pdf+Thunbergia+grandiflora&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2&gl=us |
4.01 |
(1) No spines, thorns, burrs. |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
4.02 |
No evidence of allelopathy. |
|
4.03 |
(1) Not parasitic. |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
4.04 |
Don't know |
|
4.05 |
(1) No evidence. |
(1) Searched primary lit. and Pubmed and Toxnet. |
4.06 |
(1) No evidence. (2) No evidence of being a host.(3) No evidence of harboring pathogens or pests. |
(1) http://fppd.cbio.psu.edu/ (2) http://cogeme.ex.ac.uk/search.html (3) http://affashop.gov.au/PdfFiles/PC12781.pdf |
4.07 |
(1) No evidence of allergies or toxicity to humans. |
(1) Toxnet and PubMed. |
4.08 |
No evidence (1) a vine |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
4.09 |
(1) Requires full sun. |
(1) http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/88310/ |
4.10 |
(1) Tolerates pH of 6.1-7.8. |
(1) http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/88310/ |
4.11 |
(1) Vine (2) The plant is of vigorous growth and may smother and kill trees over which it grows. |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). (2) http://www.aluka.org/action/showMetadata?doi=10.5555/AL.AP.UPWTA.1_98&pgs=&cookieSet=1 [Cited 2008 )ct 16]. |
4.12 |
(1) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
5.01 |
(1) Vine |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
5.02 |
(1) Vine |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
5.03 |
(1) Vine |
(1) Wagner, W.L., Herbst, D.R., Sohmer, S. H. 1999. Manual of the flowering plants of Hawaii. Revised edition. Bernice P. Bishop Museum special publication. University of Hawai‘i Press/Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu. 1919 pp. (two volumes). |
5.04 |
(1) Extensive underground tubers. |
(1) http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:fodj7MEjjBMJ:www.dpi.qld.gov.au/cps/rde/xbcr/dpi/IPA-Thunbergia-PP23.pdf+thunbergia+laurifolia+%2B+%22soil%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=10&gl=us |
6.01 |
(1) Produces seeds abundantly in natural environment. No evidence of substantial reproductive failure. |
(1) Meyer, J.Y. and C. Lavergne. 2004. Beautés fatales: Acanthaceae species as invasive alien plants on tropical Indo-Pacific Islands. Diversity and Distributions. 10:333-347. |
6.02 |
(1) Produces viable seed. |
(1) http://www.hear.org/starr/hiplants/reports/pdf/thunbergia_laurifolia.pdf |
6.03 |
Don't know |
|
6.04 |
Don't know |
|
6.05 |
Don't know |
|
6.06 |
(1) On Maui, T. laurifolia appeared to be spreading vegetatively from plantings into nearby disturbed lowland scrub. |
(1) http://www.hear.org/starr/hiplants/reports/pdf/thunbergia_laurifolia.pdf |
6.07 |
Don't know |
|
7.01 |
(1) May be spread from dumping of garden cuttings. |
(1) http://florawww.eeb.uconn.edu/acc_num/199900057.html |
7.02 |
(1) Widely use ornamental. |
(1) http://www.hear.org/starr/hiplants/reports/pdf/thunbergia_laurifolia.pdf |
7.03 |
No evidence |
|
7.04 |
(1) Probably not. "The seed capsule is brown and inconspicuous. It is oval-shaped with pinched ends (ie elliptical), 10 mm long and 4 mm wide. The capsules usually contain two to four hemispherical seeds which have a hollow inner surface like a cap. The seeds are less than 10 mm in diameter and covered with brown scales." |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
7.05 |
(1) Vegetative fragments are dispersed in flood waters. |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
7.06 |
(1) Probably not. "The seed capsule is brown and inconspicuous. It is oval-shaped with pinched ends (ie elliptical), 10 mm long and 4 mm wide. The capsules usually contain two to four hemispherical seeds which have a hollow inner surface like a cap. The seeds are less than 10 mm in diameter and covered with brown scales." |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
7.07 |
(1) Probably not. "The seed capsule is brown and inconspicuous. It is oval-shaped with pinched ends (ie elliptical), 10 mm long and 4 mm wide. The capsules usually contain two to four hemispherical seeds which have a hollow inner surface like a cap. The seeds are less than 10 mm in diameter and covered with brown scales." |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
7.08 |
(1) Probably not. "The seed capsule is brown and inconspicuous. It is oval-shaped with pinched ends (ie elliptical), 10 mm long and 4 mm wide. The capsules usually contain two to four hemispherical seeds which have a hollow inner surface like a cap. The seeds are less than 10 mm in diameter and covered with brown scales." |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
8.01 |
(1) Probably not. "The seed capsule is brown and inconspicuous. It is oval-shaped with pinched ends (ie elliptical), 10 mm long and 4 mm wide. The capsules usually contain two to four hemispherical seeds which have a hollow inner surface like a cap. The seeds are less than 10 mm in diameter and covered with brown scales." |
(1) http://www.weeds.gov.au/publications/guidelines/alert/pubs/t-laurifolia.pdf |
8.02 |
Don't know |
|
8.03 |
(1) Arsenal is the only effective herbicide found to control the plant. Although very effective one application by either overall spraying or injection, rarely achieves 100% kills. Ongoing monitoring and follow-up is needed |
(1) http://www.dpi.qld.gov.au/cps/rde/xbcr/dpi/IPA-Thunbergia-PP23.pdf |
8.04 |
(1) Soon resprouts from tubers. |
(1) http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:fodj7MEjjBMJ:www.dpi.qld.gov.au/cps/rde/xbcr/dpi/IPA-Thunbergia-PP23.pdf+thunbergia+laurifolia+%2B+%22soil%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=10&gl=us |
8.05 |
Don't know |
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