Abstract
Restoring native grassland along roadsides can provide a relatively low-maintenance, drought-tolerant and stable perennial vegetative cover with reduced weed growth, as opposed to the high-maintenance invasive annual cover (requiring intensive mowing and herbicide treatments) that dominates most Sacramento Valley roadsides. A survey of long-established roadside native-grass plantings in Yolo County showed that once established and protected from disturbance, such plantings can persist with minimal maintenance for more than a decade, retaining a high proportion of native species. The survey also showed that each species of native perennial grass displays a microhabitat preference for particular roadside topographic positions, and that native perennial grass cover is negatively affected by disturbance.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
O’Dell, R. E., Young, S. L., & Claassen, V. P. (2007). Native roadside perennial grasses persist a decade after planting in the Sacramento Valley. California Agriculture, 61(2), 79–84. https://doi.org/10.3733/ca.v061n02p79
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