Promising range forage and wildland cover crops from university plant introduction nurseries
Author
Beecher CramptonAuthor Affiliations
Beecher Crampton is Lecturer, Agronomy and Associate Specialist in the Experiment Station, University of california, Davis.Publication Information
Hilgardia 18(3):12-13. DOI:10.3733/ca.v018n03p12. March 1964.
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Abstract
Increasing interest in wildlands and the pressures exerted on existing range indicate that greater utilization of these areas is possible by introduction of better and more highly productive plants. The University's agronomy department maintains nurseries for evaluating plant species for use on range and wildlands at the Davis campus, Riverside campus, South Coast Field Station, West Side Field Station, and the Hopland Field Station. The Davis nursery is the largest, and promising species are planted at the field stations to determine degrees of adaptation, production, growth characteristics, and disease resistance. A shrub nursery at Davis also allows study of the behavior and adaptability of woody range plants.
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