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Sowing Danthonia May 2009.


  With the demand for native grass seed increasing and its availability decreasing, remnant grasslands are under more pressure as sources of indigenous seed. With a lack of consistent rainfall over the last few years some native grass species have produced very little seed and the steady rate of remnants that are lost to development make seed harder to obtain.

  These pressures on native grasslands, along with the weed seed often associated with the harvesting of remnant grasslands are some of the reasons that Flora Victoria has started large-scale production of native grass seed sourced from the Basalt Plains to the North and West of Melbourne.

  The seed we are producing has been collected from large healthy populations within a 40 km radius of Melbourne on basalt soils starting from Little River, up to Melton and across to Yan Yean.

  Flora Victoria has commenced the sowing of several species and hopes to have some seed available for sale next year. Large quantities of seed will probably not be available until 2011.

  Some of the species that have been sown and will be available by 2011 are:

 

Danthonia (a mix of species that will be announced)

Chloris truncata

Bothriochloa macra

Dicanthium sericeum

Themeda triandra

Poa labillardieri

Microlaena stipoides

Dichelachne crinata



  This page will be updated to reflect our progress and the possible availability of the above species as the crops progress.

Danthonia crop in August 2010.


Chloris truncata crop in Febuary 2010.


Danthonia racemosa crop in July 2010.


Dicanthium sericeum crop in March 2009.




 

|Welcome| |About Flora Victoria| |The Proprietors| |Grassland Management| |Seed Production| |Current Projects| |Uses for Native Grasses| |About Using Native Grasses| |Services| |Contact Us| |Links|