Weed control, management, ecology, and minutia
- Posted by: The Weed's Network
- Re-posted by: Gale Perez
August 9, 2012
Photo:Thomas Stewart, Brigham Young University graduate student on Susan Meyer’s research team, inoculates field plots with P. semeniperda inoculum. Credit: Susan Meyer
Abstract: Cheatgrass and its cousin, red brome, are exotic annual grasses that have invaded and altered ecosystem dynamics in more than 41 million acres of desert shrublands between the Rockies and the Cascade-Sierra chain. A fungus naturally associated with these Bromus species has been found lethal to the plants' soil-banked dormant seeds. Supported by the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP), researchers Susan Meyer, Phil Allen, and Julie Beckstead cultured this fungus, Pyrenophora semeniperda, in the laboratory and developed an experimental field application that, in some trials, killed all the dormant soil-banked Bromus seeds, leaving none to germinate the following year. The team's work opens the way to a commercial...
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