January-February 2009

Balancing Act

Seed, mulch, and soil amendments: choosing wisely for the long term

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Photo: David Steinfield

By Tara Beecham

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Revegetating an area is rarely achieved with seed alone. Climate, soil conditions, budget, and project deadlines are just a few considerations that contractors must initially make regarding mulch and soil amendment choice as they work to make the most of the seed they’ve selected. A requirement to use, native seed can sometimes complicate these decisions, but native seed is usually the best choice for long-term protection.

Mixing seeds and their enhancing and protecting partners can and should be approached as a science. Finding the right balance between quick groundcover and long-term protection means placing your faith in strong, proven performers as well as the willingness to try innovative methods that can save your project time and money. Learning which choices are the right ones for your site can take periods of trial and error. Several professionals recently shared their experience with seed, mulch, and soil amendment use in the field.

Protecting Wildlife Habitat in Wyoming
Sage-grouse populations have been declining in Johnson County, WY, as well as across the state as a whole for the past century. The state is undergoing a process determining whether the bird species should be listed as endangered, says Colleen Faber, a senior reclamation and regulatory analyst at Lance Oil & Gas Company, which is a subsidiary of Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, based in Gillette, WY.

Photo: Anadarko Petroleum Company

Close-up view of the first year growth of falcate and native grass and forb species at the Wyoming site
“We look for opportunities like our seeding and reclamation to enhance their habitat while also developing energy resources for our nation,” she says, citing as an example a site in Johnson County, which included seeding a pipeline right of way. “Our seeding was very successful and established very well within two years, and it used species sage grouse and other wildlife and livestock species utilize.”

A seed mix that included western wheat, green needle, slender, thickspike, purple prairie clover, maple grove native flax, yellow prairie coneflower, western yarrow, and falcate alfalfa was added to the loamy-to-clay loamy soil at the site. It was planted at a rate of just over 15 pounds of pure live seed per acre.

Seed choice had been determined by federal requirements. “The federal lands in this project required only native seed—indigenous to the area, not collected from the area,” says Faber. “We included falcata alfalfa on our private lands to enhance the habitat for sage grouse. This project area has one of the largest sage grouse populations in northeast Wyoming, along with mule deer and pronghorn populations.”

Faber described the area’s topography as challenging. “We are working with very ‘breaky’ country where the soils can change in very short distances,” she says.

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Workers broadcast-seeded the yarrow, explains Faber, while “the remaining species were drill seeded with a drag behind the seeder.”

Although Lance Oil & Gas didn’t use mycorrhizal fungi or fertilizers on this project, it has used them on others. Faber explains that on the project’s steeper slopes, the company used Lehi, UT–based Granite Seed Company’s hydromulch to enhance seed establishment as well as to provide erosion control. Granite also provided the seed for the project. Next Page >

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