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Indiangrass
Scientific Name: Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash
Common Name: Indiangrass
Morphological Characteristics:
- native, perennial
- warm season
- rhizomatous
- plants are tall, 3 to 7 feet
- leaf blades 10 to 28 inches long, flat, narrow at base, sometimes hairy
- seed head panicle is golden bronze to yellow, 6 to 12 inches long, rather
dense and narrow, spikelets paired, hairy, awns ˝ inch long, bent, twisted
- adapted to deep moist soils from heavy clays to deep sands
- growth starts in mid-spring from short scaly rhizomes
- seedheads form late August and September
Conservation Use:
Why collect this plant?
In north-central Texas there is a lack of locally-adapted native (ecotypic)
plant materials for use in revegetation projects. The North Texas Ecotype
Project (NTEP) was established to conserve the culturally, historically, and
ecologically important native plants of north-central Texas, and promote their
use for revegetation projects.
The Knox City Plant Materials Center in cooperation with NTEP has identified
Indiangrass as a plant meeting project objectives. Plant and seed collections
supporting NTEP are targeted for 43 counties located within all or portions of 6
vegetation areas in north-central Texas including: Blackland Prairie, East Cross
Timbers, Fort Worth Prairie, Lampasas Cut Plain, West Cross Timbers and Rolling
Plains.
Future ecotypes developed will benefits the following conservation practice
standards: 645 Upland Wildlife Habitat Management; 342 Critical Area Planting;
562 Recreation Area Improvement; 550 Range Planting; 512 Pasture and Hay
Planting; 327 Conservation Cover; 643 Restoration and Management of Rare or
Declining Habitats.
Your assistance in collecting this plant helps support the NRCS conservation
practice standards which are employed daily to conserve the natural resources of
Texas!
Center Requesting Seed:
Knox City Plant Materials Center
How to Collect Seed:
- Identify native plant stands in your area. You can go to the following
websites for helpful photos http://plants.usda.gov or
http://www.noble.org/imagegallery/index.html
or www.wildflower.org
- Determine if seed is mature. Mature seed is typically dry and
will easily separate from the seed head.
- Hand strip mature seed by grasping the bottom of the seed head
then gently pulling away from the base of the plant. Deposit seed in
a brown paper sack. Collect seed from a minimum of 30 to 50 plants.
- Label each collection as it is made so collections do not get
mixed up. Information required includes: Collector’s name, number of
plants collected, location (parish, city, highway, and GPS
coordinates), site description (soil type, slope, and plants growing
in association).
- Complete NRCS-ECS-580; Plant Collection Information Form and
mail with collected seeds to the NRCS Plant Materials Center requesting the species.
Knox City Plant Materials Center
3776 FM 1292
Knox City, TX 79529-2514
Helpful Tips:
Look for superior plants that display differences in color, height, or forage
abundance and record
observations. Differences in growing site or location should be made into
separate collections if they are separated by more than 1 mile between sites.
Photos:
This document requires
Adobe Acrobat.
NRCS
Species for 2006 Plant Collections - Indiangrass (PDF; 77 KB)
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