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1 April 2013 The Potential Global Distribution of Tall Buttercup (Ranunculus acris ssp. acris): Opposing Effects of Irrigation and Climate Change
Graeme W. Bourdôt, Shona L. Lamoureaux, Michael S. Watt, Darren J. Kriticos
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Abstract

Tall buttercup, a native of central and northern Europe, has become naturalized in the United States and Canada, and in South Africa, Tasmania and New Zealand. In Canada and New Zealand it has become an economically significant weed in cattle-grazed pastures. In this study we develop a CLIMEX model for tall buttercup and use it to project the weed's potential distribution under current and future climates and in the presence and absence of irrigation. There was close concordance between the model's projection of suitable climate and recorded observations of the species. The projection was highly sensitive to irrigation; the area of potentially suitable land globally increasing by 30% (from 34 to 45 million km2) under current climate when a “top-up” irrigation regime (rainfall topped up 4 mm d−1 on irrigable land), was included in the model. Most of the area that becomes suitable under irrigation is located in central Asia and central North America. By contrast, climate change is projected to have the opposite effect; the potential global distribution diminishing by 18% (from 34 to 28 million km2). This range contraction was the net result of a northward expansion in the northern limit for the species in Canada and the Russian Federation, and a relatively larger increase in the land area becoming unsuitable mainly in central Asia and south eastern United States.

Nomenclature: Tall buttercup, Ranunculus acris L. ssp. acris.

Weed Science Society of America
Graeme W. Bourdôt, Shona L. Lamoureaux, Michael S. Watt, and Darren J. Kriticos "The Potential Global Distribution of Tall Buttercup (Ranunculus acris ssp. acris): Opposing Effects of Irrigation and Climate Change," Weed Science 61(2), 230-238, (1 April 2013). https://doi.org/10.1614/WS-D-12-00106.1
Received: 16 July 2012; Accepted: 1 October 2012; Published: 1 April 2013
KEYWORDS
animal health
climate change
CLIMEX
giant buttercup
meadow buttercup
tall buttercup
weed invasion
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