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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Even Native Seeds Need a Nosh
For certain projects, clients will specify that all seed used must originate within a 250-mile radius, and for those, Critical Site Products Inc. of Kansas City, MO, must provide Missouri-native seeds. “Even for the driest or drought settings, we are a true native provider,” says the company’s Phillip Robertson. “We usually call seeds ‘Missouri ecotype,’ yet that can change slightly between north and south Missouri, and some of those plants also spread out into Kansas. Most of our clients range from St. Louis to Kansas, although we’ve furnished for jobs in Arkansas as well. We have collectors in the region who gather the seed for us; we are more of a blend house, featuring upland blend, wetlands blend, and others that are spelled out for certain species. We sell 650 species. A common list would include butterfly milkweed, coneflowers, Rudbeckia, little blue stem, and grey dropseed grasses. Most of our customers are working mitigation restoration jobs, whether at the city, state, or federal level. We see a lot of streambank restoration jobs. Missouri has a wide range of ecosystems, from woodlands to wetlands to plains. Nearly in our backyard, Indian Creek is getting channel improvements. Crews are trying to get it in and built, to reduce flow by the Mississippi River. However, a wet spring 2008 set them back.”

Even though the native plants are used to Missouri’s climate and soils, they still need a nosh—some tasty fertilizer—to get them going, and Critical Site Products puts Gro-Power products in its seed mix. Based in Chino, CA, Gro-Power Inc. produces a variety of fertilizers, conditioners, and time-released products for the industry. “We like their products, especially the 12-8-8 tablets and mycorrhizal tabs. The time-released products help in many applications, as well.”

Photo: Gro-Power Inc
Streambank restoration projects are often difficult to seed.
Critical Site Products’ main customers are in construction: “Not those making housing developments; more like firms that replace sewer pipes in the middle of a field, for example,” Robertson explains. “First and foremost, the plants installed are put there for ground stabilization. As plant roots can go from 1 foot to 8 or 10 feet deep, the right plantings can do an excellent job. Also, you want to help keep habitats for wildlife. A typical application would be on road rights of way, where one has to replace what was disturbed. For such sites, we’d suggest granular mycorrhizae and hydromulch, as well as Gro-Power’s 0-3-1 Prairie Formulation. Native seeds don’t use much nitrogen; all it does is feed weeds. For many of the sites we plant, it’s almost a drought circumstance, because the sites don’t get watered by man once they’re planted. However, there has been lots of rain here in the past few years.

“What we like is not getting calls to do rework—and with our seeds and Gro-Power, we don’t get them,” Nicholson concludes.

“Woodn’t” You Like a Good Mulch?
Mulching seed serves several purposes. The cover helps keep the seed in place (so seed doesn’t blow away or get eaten by birds); it helps retain moisture, aiding germination; and, as it breaks down, the cover adds organic matter to the soil. Straw is often the chosen mulch, but it can present problems; it can sometimes contain unwanted seed, and it can cover the ground so well that it chokes growth.

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With that in mind, the Boise, ID, District Bureau of Land Management chose to test a new type of mulch, which contains wood strands, during replanting after the 2005 Snake One wildfire.

“Twenty-five thousand acres burned in this area, which is near the Idaho-Oregon border, northwest of Wheezer, right by the Snake River,” says the BLM’s Cindy Fritz. “The land had been covered with a mix of sagebrush and bitterbrush, as well as Douglas fir and Ponderosa pine. In the lower section, which is more rangeland, we were worried about soil loss, and wanted to get moisture and seeds there, as this was a high-intensity burn area. The area also includes some steep 2:1 slopes, which we didn’t want washing a lot of sediment into the river’s fisheries.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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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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