Products and Services 2010

What You Need for Seed

Problem areas often need fine-tuned combinations of seed and soil amendments.

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Photo: Boise Bureau of Land Management

By Janis Keating

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North American Green products also use less water during application. “We can put more product in the tanks, and it’s favorable for the contractor. As North American Green products are cotton-based products with straw, they’re nontoxic and completely biodegradable.”

He explains what can happen if the site’s not protected: “Rills—vertical cuts into the mountain—turn into gulleys, which don’t go away. When treating a slope, you can use additives other than seed and mulch, and soil sampling is advisable. Anything needed to change the soil’s pH can be added to the mulch and broadcast evenly.

“When using natural fibers, the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio is usually already exactly what’s needed for the soil; you don’t need to ‘thin out’ the carbon after a fire,” he continues. “When we compare different mulches, we see different carbon-to-nitrogen ratios. Wood fibers usually absorb nutrients, then you have to add a fertilizer. Cotton fibers are not bulky and are nitrogen-rich, so you can use less fertilizer. We discovered this in test plots—in some we added fertilizer, and in others, we said, ‘Let’s see what happens if we don’t add it.’ If we do add fertilizer, we use a 15-15-15. North American Green products require less fertilizer. Wood-based mulch has a carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of 300:1; what we’re using is more like 40:1 ratio. There’s less biomatter to break down, and the mulch is made of something a plant can more easily use.”

Photo: Boise Bureau of Land Management
Initial application
Photo: Boise Bureau of Land Management
Woodstraw application with a distribution of about 70%
Two months after the November 2008 fires, Vermeesch already noticed new growth on the formerly charred hillsides. “As many native seeds need heat to germinate, or need old-growth burn-off so they can flourish, the fires start another growing process. It’s just a shame that so many homes got caught up in this cycle of life. A great effort is needed to make sure homes on slopes don’t wash down; we must do whatever we can to promote vegetation.”

A Fundamental Fungus
Water, sun, and good soil do the trick for most plants, but some need a little extra help. Mycorrhizal fungi, which attach themselves to plant roots, help attract vital nutrients in the soil, which in turn feed the plant. Healthier plant, healthier soil-holding roots—an erosion controller’s dream! Yet some soils lack, or have lost, mycorrhizal fungi, so these herbal helpers have to be incorporated into the ground.

Madison, GA’s Pennington Seed Inc. has teamed up with Mycorrhizal Applications Inc. of Grants Pass, OR, to streamline this process. Instead of going through a two-step application (mycorrhizae, then seeds), Pennington has included the mycorrhizae in the mix.

“Tests have been done in Georgia, Arizona, and Texas, using plants specially chosen for the Southwest and deep Southeastern environments,” says Pennington’s Russ Nicholson, CPAg. “For Texas, our mix includes Bermuda and Bahaia grasses and Durana clover. This clover is a cool-season legume, which fixes nitrogen from the atmosphere into the soil, making it available to the plants. The result is more perpetual plants with less maintenance. Durana clover, a bushy-type with white flowers that grows to about knee-high, has up to 97 stolons per square foot; other clovers have about 50. Durana clover fixes up to 100 pounds of nitrogen to the acre—all the nitrogen that’s necessary for the tall fescue. There’s a symbiotic relationship between this and the other grasses, and with mycorrhizae, which grabs the phosphorus and potassium in the soil and brings it in for the plants. Pennington’s SlopeMaster, which is what we call this mix, makes the planting self sustaining.” Other mixes have been prepared for different areas, such as the mid-north and the prairies of the mid-south.

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All the plants included in the seed mix are deep rooted and quick to establish, which make them perfect for an erosion control mix. “The clover grows slowly, but Bermudas and fescues are up and going in three weeks; by 45 days you have good ground cover,” Nicholson says. “For a tough site, one might use a nurse crop, like an annual rye or millet, adding that to the mix. For example, we ran tests on a temporary soil stockpile in Florida that was a couple hundred feet tall—a 1:1 slope. We didn’t want a nurse plant to germinate, grow tall, and fall over, so we used a cereal rye, which allowed the sun to reach the soil, to germinate the other three plants.”

Adding mycorrhizae to the seed mix makes the resultant plants work more effectively. “Along with phosphorus and potassium, it attracts glomulin, which is like a glue that binds the nutrients to the plant. The mycorrhizae hang there in pockets, and the plant makes a larger root mass, holding more water, which makes the plant more drought tolerant. Mycorrhizae also helps in saline soils, which are often found when dredging in south Florida, and brackish soil. Or in an area that’s irrigated with salt water—say, water from a recycling center being used to irrigate turf. Reclaimed water is successful in removing heavy metals, but sometimes the salt stays in; mycorrhizae can aid in this process.” Next Page >

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wtg

June 3rd, 2009 9:12 PM PT

in the eastern u.s. we have differnt problems . we need to control the weeds and plant the native wild flowers and grass which are not laying on the ground ready to sprout.

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