Andropogon gayanus, commonly known as gamba grass, Rhodesian blue grass, tambuki grass, and other names, is a species of grass native to most of the tropical and subtropical savannas of Africa.
Andropogon gayanus was recognised and named by 1833.[1] Its common names include gamba grass, bluestem (Africa, Australia); Rhodesian andropogon (southern Africa); Rhodesian blue grass (Zimbabwe); onga, tambuki grass (north-west Africa); and sadabahar (India).[2]
This tufting perennial bunchgrass can grow 4m (13feet) tall and 70cm (30inches) in diameter, and has hairy leaves. Most of its roots are fibrous, spreading close to the surface of the soil for up to,[3] but it also has thick cord roots which store starch and anchor the plant as well as vertical roots able to extract water from a greater depth during the dry season.
It produces large numbers of light, fluffy seeds (up to 244,000 seeds each year, with 65% viability[3]), which can be spread by wind, animals or machinery.[2] It spreads rapidly where vegetation is disturbed, but most seeds fall within of the parent plant.[3]
The grass is native to most of the tropical and subtropical savannas of Africa,[4] also extending southwards into Mozambique, Botswana, Namibia and South Africa in regions with long dry seasons. It occurs naturally in xerophytic grasslands on doleritic, sandy or clay soils, at altitudes of up to, and is very drought-tolerant. However it does not do well where mean minimum temperatures dip below 4.4 degrees Celsius, and it is not frost-tolerant.[2] It has also been introduced around the world as a pasture crop in Australia and Brazil.[5]
A. gayanus was introduced as a pasture crop in many parts of the world, including Australia, tropical countries of the Americas, as well as naturalising in Brazil It has also been introduced in Nigeria to reclaim land that has been overgrazed.[3]
Strips of the grass are also planted in millet fields help to reduce wind erosion of the soil.[2]
In some African countries, the stems are also used as thatch and for making pen.
Gamba grass forms dense patches, out-competing native species and altering ecosystems. Areas of dense infestation have a significantly higher fire risk than native pastures.[6] [7] It is highly resistant to both cutting and fire, and ungrazed tussocks can generate very intense fires,[2] leading to loss of tree cover and long-term environmental damage. It replaces native grasses, reducing natural biodiversity on ungrazed land. Being highly invasive, it can move into conservation areas, semi-urban residential land and mining leases.[3]
This has led to its declaration as a noxious species, officially being declared a "Weed of national significance" in Australia since 2012.[8] [9] Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Queensland all have state legislation which prohibits planting of new plants and requires land managers to control infestations.
Gamba grass was introduced into the Northern Territory of Australia in 1931 for trial as cattle feed. There are now large swathes of the plant over 532,900 hectares between Darwin and Katherine.[10] Gamba grass already accounts for as much as 20% of Litchfield National Park, around 30,000 hectares of the 144,000-hectare park, contributing to worsening fire seasons.[11] [12] Researchers estimate that this will increase to as much as 30% by 2033, a major threat to the park's future due to extreme fire risk.[13] Conservationist Mitch Hart has described gamba grass as a "triple threat" to people's lives, the economy and the potential destruction of Australia's northern savanna. Two zones of management have been declared. Class A requires eradication and class B requires growth and spread to be controlled. The Gamba Army, a partnership between the Northern Territory Government and Territory NRM are working to control spread in priority areas.[14]
Gamba grass was imported into the state of Queensland as a pasture grass in 1942, but was not planted on a large scale until about 1983. Almost all known locations in Queensland are in areas below altitude that receive annual rainfall. It is declared a class 2 pest under the Land Protection (Pest and Stock Route Management) Act 2002, making it an offence to introduce, keep or supply the species without a permit and requiring land managers to keep land free of the species.[15]
Gamba grass has effectively been eradicated from Western Australia, where infestations were not as widespread as the NT and Queensland. The Gamba Grass Eradication Program, a collaborative project supported by the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development, El Questro Station and Kimberley Rangelands Biosecurity Association began in 2011 and has been highly successful. It reduced the number of plants to 3,000 by 2018, leaving just 23 by 2020. They found only eight plants in the 2021 wet season. However it currently receives no funding from the federal government and monitoring is necessary for a further five years to ensure that there is no future spread.[9]