Displaying 1 to 9 of 9

  • An Assessment of Native Seed Needs and Capacities

    https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/an-assessment-of-native-seed-needs-a…

    National Academies of Sciences, Medicine, and Engineering.

    An ad hoc study committee appointed by the National Academies of Sciences, Medicine, and Engineering is assessing federal, state, tribal and private sector needs and capacity for supplying native plant seeds for ecological restoration and other purposes. A final report (2023) examines the needs for native plant restoration and other activities, provides recommendations for improving the reliability, predictability, and performance of the native seed supply, and presents an ambitious agenda for action.

  • Assessing Pollinator Friendliness of Plants and Designing Mixes to Restore Habitat for Bees

    Jan 2022
    https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/63732

    USDA. FS. Rocky Mountain Research Station.
    General Technical Report. RMRS-GTR-429.

    The worldwide decline in bee populations is threatening the delivery of pollination services, thus leading to the development of pollinator restoration strategies. In the United States, one way to protect and restore bee populations is to use seed mixes composed of pollinator-friendly native plants to revegetate federal lands following disturbance.

    Scientists assessed the attractiveness and use by bees of 24 native plant species that are standard for revegetation projects (focal plants) on national forest lands in western Montana.

  • National Seed Strategy

    https://www.blm.gov/programs/natural-resources/native-plant-communities/nationa…

    DOI. United States Geological Survey.

    The National Seed Strategy is a collaboration between 12 federal agencies and over 300 non-federal partners associated with the Plant Conservation Alliance and led by the Bureau of Land Management, facilitates coordination among tribal, state, federal, local and private entities, including commercial growers. The National Seed Strategy fosters interagency collaboration to guide the development, availability, and use of seed needed for timely and effective restoration. See progress reports, fact sheets and other publications related to this restoration initiative.

  • Native Seeds: Supplying Restoration

    2023
    https://ser-insr.org/native-seed-film

    International Network for Seed-Based Restoration.

    A new 9-part series 'Native Seeds: Supplying Restoration' about the native seed supply chain in the Western U.S. by the International Network for Seed-Based Restoration. Filmed over four seasons, this series weaves together footage of seed collectors, farmers, researchers, and land managers working to scale up the supply of native seeds to meet the growing restoration demand. Several USDA Rocky Mountain Research Station researchers are featured in these videos. Videos were released June 29, 2023 - August 24, 2023.

  • Of Bees and Blooms: A New Scorecard For Selecting Pollinator-Friendly Plants in Restoration

    Jan/Feb 2023
    https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/rmrs/products/sycu/bees-and-blooms-new-scoreca…

    USDA. FS. Rocky Mountain Research Station.
    Science You Can Use Bulletin, Issue 58.

    Bees are declining in the U.S. and with them the pollination services on which people and wildlife depend. Several national forests have begun to include habitat restoration for bees in their forest plans. Justin Runyon, a Rocky Mountain Research Station research entomologist, and Montana State University scientists identified the most pollinator-friendly plants to include in seed mixes for use in restoration projects in the Northern Rockies.

    The researchers developed a scorecard that managers can use to select pollinator-friendly mixes based on local factors such as budget, habitat type, or plant availability.

  • Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas, Field Guide

    2022
    https://www.invasive.org/midatlantic/fieldguide/

    Invasive.org.

    Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas, Field Guide is a portable resource for both novice and expert. This practical book is intended for people interested in maintaining or restoring natural areas - from parks and preserves to residential landscapes. Use this book as an introduction to invasive plants to help you recognize, report, prevent, control and teach others about them. Managing invasive plants is crucial if we want our native plants and animals to thrive. Plant Invaders provides information on 92 aquatic and terrestrial invasive species threatening our region, guidance on control methods, discussion of the effects of climate change on invasive plants, explanations and maps of ecoregions and physiographic provinces, and suggestions for native plant alternatives.

    Citation: Swearingen, J.M. and J.P. Fulton. 2022. Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas, Field Guide. Passiflora Press. 200 pp.

  • PLANTS Database

    https://plants.sc.egov.usda.gov/home

    USDA. NRCS. National Plant Data Center.

    The PLANTS Database provides standardized information about the vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and lichens of the U.S. and its territories. The database includes names, checklists, automated tools, identification information, species abstracts, distributional data, crop information, plant symbols, plant growth data, plant materials information, plant links, references, and other plant information. The PLANTS database contains native and naturalized plants of the PLANTS Floristic Area (PFA), which consists of North America and all additional U.S. territories and protectorates.
    Note: The Invasive/Noxious Weeds data in the previous PLANTS version were outdated and not migrated to the new PLANTS version (new site launched in Spring 2021). A new PLANTS Invasive/Noxious Weeds dataset has been developed and will be deployed to PLANTS in a later release.

  • Restoring Native Plants

    https://www.tn.gov/agriculture/department/ellington-ag-center/about-ellington-a…

    Tennessee Department of Agriculture. Ellington Agricultural Center.