Native Seeds in the Marketplace: Meeting Restoration Needs in the Intermountain West, United States
Author
Jones T.A.Issue Date
2019-11Keywords
Conservation Reserve Programecological restoration
native plant materials
native seeds
seed production area
wildland seed harvest
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Thomas A. Jones "Native Seeds in the Marketplace: Meeting Restoration Needs in the Intermountain West, United States," Rangeland Ecology and Management 72(6), 1017-1029, (14 November 2019). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2019.07.009Publisher
Elsevier Inc.Journal
Rangeland Ecology & ManagementAdditional Links
https://rangelands.org/Abstract
The scale of ecological restoration in the Intermountain West (IW), United States is likely greater than anywhere else in the world. This is largely driven by response to accelerating ecological disturbances and government programs that divert privately owned cropland into soil, water, and wildlife conservation use. While restoration in the IW is challenging due to the region's aridity, over the past few decades considerable improvement in restoration seeding success has been achieved using native plants instead of the exotic species that have predominated previously. The IW is blessed with an extensive research infrastructure for native plant material development through the Natural Resources Conservation Service, the Agricultural Research Service, and the US Forest Service. A high demand for native seeds in the IW allows for a large and diverse product base of grasses, shrubs, and forbs in the form of cultivars, selected-class prevariety germplasms, and source-identified populations. Two sister native seed industries, one based on field cultivation and another based on collection from public wildlands, are likely the largest of their kind in the world. Seed is offered, mostly on a speculative basis, to major markets (e.g., Bureau of Land Management consolidated seed buy, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources seed buy, Conservation Reserve Program). Elements of the IW native seed marketplace (e.g., plant material development and cultivated seed production), may be instructive for the development of broadscale-restoration models appropriate for other parts of the world. © 2019Type
Articletext
Language
enISSN
1550-7424EISSN
1551-5028ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.rama.2019.07.009
Scopus Count
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of The Society for Range Management.