Alexander Sennikov, Georgy Lazkov, Dmitry A German
{"title":"The first checklist of alien vascular plants of Kyrgyzstan, with new records and critical evaluation of earlier data. Contribution 3.","authors":"Alexander Sennikov, Georgy Lazkov, Dmitry A German","doi":"10.3897/BDJ.13.e145624","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>We continue the series of detailed treatments of alien vascular plants of Kyrgyzstan. The complete background for every species occurrence (herbarium specimens, documented observations, published literature) is uncovered and critically evaluated in a wide context of plant invasions in Central Asia with a reference to Eastern Europe and Northern Asia, based on events in the political and economic history. Complete point distribution maps are provided for each species in Central Asia, in general and Kyrgyzstan, in particular.</p><p><strong>New information: </strong>All records of <i>Hesperismatronalis</i> in Central Asia (including Kyrgyzstan) belong to <i>H.pycnotricha</i>; the latter species is newly reported as a locally naturalised alien in Kazakhstan. The previous record of <i>Sisymbriumirio</i> from Kyrgyzstan is rejected as based on a misidentified specimen of <i>S.loeselii</i>, but the species is newly recorded here as a recent casual alien. <i>Hirschfeldiaincana</i> is presumably native in south-western Turkmenistan; its second record in Central Asia was caused by the import of contaminated wheat grain in the times of the Soviet grain crisis and its recent expansion may be linked to the increasing import of forage grain. The introduction of <i>Crambeorientalis</i> was connected with its cultivation for fodder and as an ornamental plant and its further broad dispersal was aided by winds. <i>Rorippaaustriaca</i> is native in the steppes of north-western Kazakhstan, but alien in the mountains of Central Asia. The occurrences of three alien species originated directly from cultivation (<i>Hesperispycnotricha</i> as an ornamental, <i>Armoraciarusticana</i> as an edible plant, <i>Crambeorientalis</i> as an ornamental and fodder plant), three species (<i>Hirschfeldiaincana</i>, <i>Mutardaarvensis</i>, <i>Sisymbriumirio</i>) were imported as grain contaminants, whereas two others (<i>Rorippaaustriaca</i>, <i>R.sylvestris</i>) have arrived with contaminated soil on ornamental plants or arboreous saplings. The arrival period is inferred as the Neolithic period (<i>Mutardaarvensis</i>), the Imperial times (<i>Armoraciarusticana</i>, <i>Hesperispycnotricha</i>), the post-war Soviet times (<i>Crambeorientalis</i>, <i>Rorippaaustriaca</i>, <i>R.sylvestris</i>) and the independence times (<i>Hirschfeldiaincana</i>, <i>Sisymbriumirio</i>). All the treated species, but two, increase their frequency in Kyrgyzstan; <i>Mutardaarvensis</i> has already reached its complete distribution, being an ubiquitous weed, whereas <i>Armoraciarusticana</i> experiences a projected decline because its common cultivation has ceased. No species is invasive in natural habitats. A new combination, Mutardaarvensisvar.orientalis (L.) Sennikov, is proposed for a variant with pubescent pods.</p>","PeriodicalId":55994,"journal":{"name":"Biodiversity Data Journal","volume":"13 ","pages":"e145624"},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11897906/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biodiversity Data Journal","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.13.e145624","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2025/1/1 0:00:00","PubModel":"eCollection","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: We continue the series of detailed treatments of alien vascular plants of Kyrgyzstan. The complete background for every species occurrence (herbarium specimens, documented observations, published literature) is uncovered and critically evaluated in a wide context of plant invasions in Central Asia with a reference to Eastern Europe and Northern Asia, based on events in the political and economic history. Complete point distribution maps are provided for each species in Central Asia, in general and Kyrgyzstan, in particular.
New information: All records of Hesperismatronalis in Central Asia (including Kyrgyzstan) belong to H.pycnotricha; the latter species is newly reported as a locally naturalised alien in Kazakhstan. The previous record of Sisymbriumirio from Kyrgyzstan is rejected as based on a misidentified specimen of S.loeselii, but the species is newly recorded here as a recent casual alien. Hirschfeldiaincana is presumably native in south-western Turkmenistan; its second record in Central Asia was caused by the import of contaminated wheat grain in the times of the Soviet grain crisis and its recent expansion may be linked to the increasing import of forage grain. The introduction of Crambeorientalis was connected with its cultivation for fodder and as an ornamental plant and its further broad dispersal was aided by winds. Rorippaaustriaca is native in the steppes of north-western Kazakhstan, but alien in the mountains of Central Asia. The occurrences of three alien species originated directly from cultivation (Hesperispycnotricha as an ornamental, Armoraciarusticana as an edible plant, Crambeorientalis as an ornamental and fodder plant), three species (Hirschfeldiaincana, Mutardaarvensis, Sisymbriumirio) were imported as grain contaminants, whereas two others (Rorippaaustriaca, R.sylvestris) have arrived with contaminated soil on ornamental plants or arboreous saplings. The arrival period is inferred as the Neolithic period (Mutardaarvensis), the Imperial times (Armoraciarusticana, Hesperispycnotricha), the post-war Soviet times (Crambeorientalis, Rorippaaustriaca, R.sylvestris) and the independence times (Hirschfeldiaincana, Sisymbriumirio). All the treated species, but two, increase their frequency in Kyrgyzstan; Mutardaarvensis has already reached its complete distribution, being an ubiquitous weed, whereas Armoraciarusticana experiences a projected decline because its common cultivation has ceased. No species is invasive in natural habitats. A new combination, Mutardaarvensisvar.orientalis (L.) Sennikov, is proposed for a variant with pubescent pods.
Biodiversity Data JournalAgricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
7.70%
发文量
283
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍:
Biodiversity Data Journal (BDJ) is a community peer-reviewed, open-access, comprehensive online platform, designed to accelerate publishing, dissemination and sharing of biodiversity-related data of any kind. All structural elements of the articles – text, morphological descriptions, occurrences, data tables, etc. – will be treated and stored as DATA, in accordance with the Data Publishing Policies and Guidelines of Pensoft Publishers.
The journal will publish papers in biodiversity science containing taxonomic, floristic/faunistic, morphological, genomic, phylogenetic, ecological or environmental data on any taxon of any geological age from any part of the world with no lower or upper limit to manuscript size.