Plant Assessment Form
More Colocasia esculenta resources
Colocasia esculenta
Synonyms: Arum esculentum; Caladium esculentum; Colocasia antiquorum
Common Names: taro root; wild taro; coco-yam; eddo; elephant-ear-plant
Evaluated on: 20-Dec-16
List committee review date: 25/01/2017
Re-evaluation date:
Evaluator(s)
Cal-IPC
916-802-2004
rrobison@cal-ipc.org
List committee members
Elizabeth BrusatiTim Hyland
Eric Wrubel
Irina Irvine
Holly Forbes
General Comments
No general comments for this species
Table 2. Criteria, Section, and Overall Scores
Overall Score?
Moderate
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Alert Status?
Alert
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Documentation?
3 out of 5
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Score | Documentation | |||
1.1 | ?Impact on abiotic ecosystem processes | B. Moderate | Reviewed Scientific Publication | |
1.2 | ?Impact on plant community | B. Moderate | Reviewed Scientific Publication | |
1.3 | ?Impact on higher trophic levels | U. Unknown | No Information | |
1.4 | ?Impact on genetic integrity | D. None | Reviewed Scientific Publication | |
2.1 | ?Role of anthropogenic and natural disturbance in establishment | B. Moderate | Reviewed Scientific Publication | |
2.2 | ?Local rate of spread with no management | B. Increases less rapidly | Observational | |
2.3 | ?Recent trend in total area infested within state | A. Increasing rapidly | Observational | |
2.4 |
?Innate reproductive potential (see Worksheet A) |
B. Moderate | Reviewed Scientific Publication | |
2.5 | ?Potential for human-caused dispersal | A. High | Other Published Material | |
2.6 | ? Potential for natural long-distance dispersal | A. Frequent | Other Published Material | |
2.7 | ?Other regions invaded | B. Invades 1 or 2 ecological types | Other Published Material | |
3.1 |
?Ecological amplitude/Range (see Worksheet C) |
D. Narrow | Other Published Material | |
3.2 |
?Distribution/Peak frequency (see Worksheet C) |
D. Very low | Other Published Material |
Table 3. Documentation
Scores are explained in the "Criteria for Categorizing Invasive Non-Native Plants that Threaten Wildlands".
Section 1: Impact | |
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Question 1.1 Impact on abiotic ecosystem processes? | B Reviewed Scientific Publication |
Identify ecosystem processes impacted: Vegetative growth leads to dense populations and its large leaves shade out native vegetation. Since light restriction is considered an abiotic impact, the question was answered as Moderate. Sources of information: Weber 2003 |
|
Question 1.2 Impact on plant community composition, structure, and interactions? |
B Reviewed Scientific Publication |
Identify type of impact or alteration: Forms dense growth along river and lake shores, displacing native shoreline vegetation. Vegetative growth leads to dense populations and its large leaves shade out native vegetation. Colocasia esculenta can tolerate a wide range of wet to dry sites. It easily invades wetland edges, swamps, backwater streams and riverine forests. Colocasia esculenta can form dense stands out-competing native plants. In south-eastern Queensland, it invades waterways and wetlands and replaces native aquatic plants. C. esculenta grows along the edge of the river and along The Meadows Slough mixed with other riparian vegetation, including the State-listed Rare California hibiscus (Hibiscus lasiocarpus var. occidentalis). This will make control of the C. esculenta difficult in some of the area as management of C. esculenta would conflict with the persistence of California hibiscus (Robison pers. comm.). Sources of information: Langeland and Burks 2008 |
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Question 1.3 Impact on higher trophic levels? | U No Information |
Identify type of impact or alteration: There is no information available on the impacts of C. esculenta on higher trophic levels in California or elsewhere. Sources of information: |
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Question 1.4 Impact on genetic integrity? | D Reviewed Scientific Publication |
No known hybridization occurs with native species. There are no native Colocasia species in California and few members of the Araceae in California with similar floral structure which it could hybridize with. Sources of information: Jepson eFlora 2016 |
|
Section 2: Invasiveness | |
Question 2.1 Role of anthropogenic and natural disturbance in establishment? |
B Observational |
Describe role of disturbance: C. esculenta is introduced through cultivation and after introduction can spread on its own along river banks and in wetlands. Flooding is also a means of establishment. Sources of information: Langeland and Burks 2008 |
|
Question 2.2 Local rate of spread with no management? | B Observational |
Describe rate of spread: Colocasia esculenta was first collected and verified as occurring naturally in California in 2014 (CCH 2014). The exact introduction date is unknown, but the species has been grown as a crop in California in past years (Molinar and Yang 2001, Moore and Lawrence 2003). There has been no known management in the introduction area since 2014 and the natural resources manager of Delta Meadows State Park reports that it has been observed to spread less than a mile upstream. Sources of information: Calflora 2016 |
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Question 2.3 Recent trend in total area infested within state? | A Observational |
Describe trend: Colocasia esculenta was first collected and verified as occurring naturally in California in 2014 (CCH 2014). The exact introduction date is unknown, but the species has been grown as a crop in California in past years (Molinar and Yang 2001, Moore and Lawrence 2003). There has been no known management in the introduction area since 2014 and the natural resources managers of Delta Meadows State Park reports that it has been observed to spread less than a mile upstream, and the population is expanding enough to be considered doubling in 10 years (Beard, D. and Allen, C. personal communications). After the first detection at Delta Meadows, populations were reported in San Joaquin, Solano and Orange counties, so it is assumed that the plant will be spreading and found elsewhere over time. Sources of information: Calflora 2016 |
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Question 2.4 Innate reproductive potential? | B Reviewed Scientific Publication |
Describe key reproductive characteristics: Like most other root and tuber crops, taro is vegetatively propagated, although seed production is possible. Natural breeding and population spread have been reported for wild taro. Cultivars are propagated through the use of corms, cormels (also known as suckers), while vegetative propagation occurs through stolons in the wild. According to Weber (2003), naturalized plants rarely produce seeds and only in hot, tropical climates. Sources of information: Chair 2016 |
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Question 2.5 Potential for human-caused dispersal? | A Other Published Material |
Identify dispersal mechanisms: Dispersed primarily by purposeful or accidental movement of vegetative fragments. Only a portion of corm crown and petiole are needed to establish a new plant. C. esculenta has been grown as a crop in California in past years (Molinar and Yang 2001, Moore and Lawrence 2003). Sources of information: Langeland and Burks 2008 |
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Question 2.6 Potential for natural long-distance dispersal? | A Other Published Material |
Identify dispersal mechanisms: Rhizome fragments are carried by streams. Grows mostly next to rivers so there is high potential for long-distance dispersal. Floods can dislodge bud-laden rhizomes from the banks. Growth seems to be best in the silty soils lining the river-banks. Sources of information: Langeland and Burks 2008 |
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Question 2.7 Other regions invaded? | B Other Published Material |
Identify other regions: C. esculenta is native to Australia, India, and southeastern Asia. It is naturalized in Florida, New Zealand, West Indies, southern Europe, and the Canary Islands, mainly in tropical climates. It can be found growing mainly in moist forests and wet areas in riparian habitats, riverbanks, along streams, marshes, and canals. It can also be found in secondary forests, roadsides, and disturbed areas near to abandoned crop fields. It has invaded some of these habitat types in California, but is not yet found in woodlands or riparian habitats away from the immediate water's edge, and has not yet spread widely. Sources of information: Langeland and Burks 2008 |
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Section 3: Distribution | |
Question 3.1 Ecological amplitude/Range? | D Other Published Material |
Colocasia esculenta was first collected and verified as occurring naturally in California in 2014 (CCH 2014). The exact introduction date is unknown, but the species has been grown as a crop in California in past years (Molinar and Yang 2001, Moore and Lawrence 2003). A specimen was collected from Delta Meadows State Park in 2014, located near Isleton in Sacramento County. Plants were growing along the edge of the river and in The Meadows Slough mixed with other riparian vegetation, including the State-listed Rare California hibiscus (Hibiscus lasiocarpus var. occidentalis). Further mapping in the area identified it as occurring in 7 patches in the Park as well as upstream and downstream from the Park boundary in two places (Robison 2014). Other reports were submitted to Calflora for locations in Solano, San Joaquin and Orange counties (Calflora 2016). The locations in Solano and San Joaquin counties are on river edges, the Orange County habitat is unknown, but appears to be a wetland edge from the aerial photograph. Sources of information: CCH 2014 |
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Question 3.2 Distribution/Peak frequency? | D Other Published Material |
Describe distribution: Occurs along river and slough edges in the Sacramento and San Joaquin delta. In Orange County it is growing along the shaded, moist edge of a small drainage, probably fed by urban runoff, but in a native plant community. Probably best described as a light riparian area (Vanderhoff, R. pers. comm.). Sources of information: CCH 2014 |
Worksheet A - Innate reproductive potential
Reaches reproductive maturity in 2 years or less | Yes |
Dense infestations produce >1,000 viable seed per square meter | No |
Populations of this species produce seeds every year. | No |
Seed production sustained over 3 or more months within a population annually | Unknown |
Seeds remain viable in soil for three or more years | Unknown |
Viable seed produced with both self-pollination and cross-pollination | Unknown |
Has quickly spreading vegetative structures (rhizomes, roots, etc.) that may root at nodes | Yes |
Fragments easily and fragments can become established elsewhere | Yes |
Resprouts readily when cut, grazed, or burned | Yes |
Total points: | 5 |
Total unknowns: | 3 |
Total score: | B? |
Related traits:
Worksheet B - Arizona Ecological Types is not included here
Worksheet C - California Ecological Types
(sensu Holland 1986)Major Ecological Types | Minor Ecological Types | Code? |
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Marine Systems | marine systems | |
Freshwater and Estuarine | lakes, ponds, reservoirs | |
Aquatic Systems | rivers, streams, canals | |
estuaries | ||
Dunes | coastal | |
desert | ||
interior | ||
Scrub and Chaparral | coastal bluff scrub | |
coastal scrub | ||
Sonoran desert scrub | ||
Mojavean desert scrub (incl. Joshua tree woodland) | ||
Great Basin scrub | ||
chenopod scrub | ||
montane dwarf scrub | ||
Upper Sonoran subshrub scrub | ||
chaparral | ||
Grasslands, Vernal Pools, Meadows, and other Herb Communities | coastal prairie | |
valley and foothill grassland | ||
Great Basin grassland | ||
vernal pool | ||
meadow and seep | ||
alkali playa | ||
pebble plain | ||
Bog and Marsh | bog and fen | |
marsh and swamp | D, < 5% | |
Riparian and Bottomland habitat | riparian forest | |
riparian woodland | ||
riparian scrub (incl.desert washes) | ||
Woodland | cismontane woodland | |
piñon and juniper woodland | ||
Sonoran thorn woodland | ||
Forest | broadleaved upland forest | |
North Coast coniferous forest | ||
closed cone coniferous forest | ||
lower montane coniferous forest | ||
upper montane coniferous forest | ||
subalpine coniferous forest | ||
Alpine Habitats | alpine boulder and rock field | |
alpine dwarf scrub | ||
Amplitude (breadth): | D | |
Distribution (highest score): | D |
Infested Jepson Regions
Click here for a map of Jepson regions
- Great Valley
- Southwest