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  • Invasive species
    • Distribution and impacts of established pest animals and weeds
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    • Prioritising targets for biological control of weeds
    • The National Priority List of Exotic Environmental Pests, Weeds and Diseases dataset
    • The state of weeds data collection in Australia
    • Wild dog research

Prioritising targets for biological control of weeds

Authors: Bertie Hennecke, Lucy Arrowsmith and José ten Have

Prickly pear plantsclose-up of blackberry fruit on a plant
Prickly Pear (left) and Blackberry (right) are included in the list of 32 Weeds of National Significance (WoNS) agreed by Australian governments based on an assessment process that prioritised these weeds based on their invasiveness, potential for spread and environmental, social and economic impacts. Biological control of Prickly Pear by the Cactoblastis moth in the 1920s and 1930s is a well-known example of effective biological control of an invasive weed. Today, the blackberry leaf rust Phragmidium violaceum is used as a biological control agent to help control blackberries. Biological control will not eradicate blackberry, but will slow the rate of spread and allow more time for control by other means. Source: Prickly pear – Agriculture Victoria; Blackberry  – Agriculture Victoria.

Effective biological control is an important component of weed control in Australia and significant investment has been made in the selection process of biocontrol agents and the identification of priority weeds for biocontrol. However, there is no nationally agreed system that facilitates prioritisation of weed targets for biological control.

Prioritising Targets for Biological Control of Weeds - a Decision Support Tool for Policy Makers outlines a framework for prioritising weed targets for biological control and includes a decision support tool that enables policy makers to determine whether biological control is a suitable option for a proposed target species.

Key factors considered in the framework include the importance rating of a weed, the feasibility of biocontrol, the likelihood of its success, and whether other factors such as social, political or economic considerations could potentially rule out a biological control option even if it were technically feasible.

The report is a result of a workshop with participation of experts within the biocontrol and weed science field, state representatives and other relevant stakeholders. This work has been an important step towards the development of a nationally agreed prioritisation process for biological control targets.

Download the full report

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Last updated: 10 October 2021

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