It was introduced in the 1930s into Arizona, United States, to provide grazing. The introduction was largely unsuccessful but the grass began to appear as a weed beside highways and in cleared fields or over-grazed land. It can spread quickly and appears to increase the mortality of native plants, including grasses and even
palo verdes, by scavenging nearby water. This plant has a very low ignition threshold and can burn even during the peak growing season. Its flammability (injurious to neighbors) and quick regrowth allow it to compete successfully against almost all vegetation in the
Sonoran Desert region. Another problem of buffelgrass in the Sonoran Desert is that it intensifies
wildfires such that
saguaro cacti that normally survive wildfires can erupt into flames when growing in areas overtaken by the grass. In
Queensland, Australia, the grass has also been blamed for causing a decline in the native grass species which are fed on by the critically endangered
northern hairy-nosed wombat, and cited as a factor in the wombats' decline. In
South Australia, it is a declared plant under the Natural Resources Management Act and weed management activities are guided by the South Australia Buffel Grass Strategic Plan (2012–17). In Australia's
Northern Territory, invasive buffel grass is implicated in worsening wild fires and is declared a weed. ==References==