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1 May 2015 Managing Medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae) on Rangeland: A Meta-Analysis of Control Effects and Assessment of Stakeholder Needs
Jeremy J. James, Elise S. Gornish, Joseph M. DiTomaso, Josh Davy, Morgan P. Doran, Theresa Becchetti, David Lile, Philip Brownsey, Emilio A. Laca
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Abstract

Invasive plant response to control efforts is strongly modified by site-specific factors, treatment timing, and environmental conditions following treatment, making management outcomes challenging to predict. Systematic reviews, which involve quantitative synthesis of data, can address this challenge by identifying general patterns of treatment effects across studies and quantifying the degree to which these effects vary. We conducted a systematic review of medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae [L.] Nevski) control treatments that couples a meta-analysis on control data with an assessment of stakeholder needs to identify critical medusahead management knowledge gaps. With the meta-analysis we generated effect size estimates of how combinations of herbicide, burning, seeding, and grazing impacted medusahead on rangeland dominated by either annual or perennial vegetation. All combinations of treatments in both rangeland systems provided significant short-term control of medusahead, although treatment effects were highly transient on perennial rangeland, particularly for seeding treatments. Stakeholders listed grazing as a preferred management tool, and on annual rangeland an almost twofold reduction in medusahead abundance was achieved by timing high stocking rates to match phenological stages when medusahead was most susceptible to defoliation. Insufficient data were available to evaluate effects of grazing on medusahead on perennial rangeland. On the basis of these data and our stakeholder survey, four major information needs emerged, including the need to better understand 1) seedbank response to burning and herbicide treatments, 2) how to optimize grazing animal impacts on medusahead given ranch enterprise constraints, 3) costs and benefits of control and risk of practice failure, and 4) impacts of adaptive management treatments conducted on larger scales and at longer time intervals. Addressing these knowledge gaps should help overcome key ecological and economic barriers inhibiting implementation of medusahead and other invasive plant management programs on rangeland and provide a positive step toward conserving the critical ecosystem services these systems provide.

© 2015 Society for Range Management. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Jeremy J. James, Elise S. Gornish, Joseph M. DiTomaso, Josh Davy, Morgan P. Doran, Theresa Becchetti, David Lile, Philip Brownsey, and Emilio A. Laca "Managing Medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae) on Rangeland: A Meta-Analysis of Control Effects and Assessment of Stakeholder Needs," Rangeland Ecology and Management 68(3), 215-223, (1 May 2015). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2015.03.006
Received: 4 November 2014; Accepted: 1 March 2015; Published: 1 May 2015
KEYWORDS
annual grassland
California
ecosystem services
invasive
restoration
Seeding
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