In February 2004, Redland Shire Council with help from a Horticulture Australia research project was able to establish a stable grass cover of seashore paspalum (Paspalum vaginatum) on a Birkdale park where the soil had previously proved too salty to grow anything else. Following on from their success with this small 0.2 ha demonstration area, Redland Shire has since invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in successfully turfing other similarly “impossible” park areas with seashore paspalum. Urban salinity can arise for different reasons in different places. In inland areas such as southern NSW and the WA wheatbelt, the usual cause is rising groundwater bringing salt to the surface. In coastal sites, salt spray or periodic tidal inundati...
Research was designed to reduce herbicide use by replacing post emergence herbicides with readily av...
In many arid and semiarid regions worldwide, high levels of soil salinity is a key driver of land de...
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which per...
This project built upon the successful outcomes of a previous project (TU02005) by adding to the dat...
Salt tolerant herbaceous plants potentially fill a number of vital roles in an Australian landscape ...
In February 2004, Redland Shire Council in Queensland planted a 2000 square metre demonstration area...
The need for salt-tolerant turfgrasses is ever-increasing. Rapid urban population growth has put eno...
Recent press publicity has emphasised the salt tolerance of the grass Paspalum vaginatum, which is a...
Secondary salinity (salinity induced by human activity) is a major world problem. Hydrological imbal...
In Australia, around 5.7 million hectares of agricultural land are currently affected by dryland sal...
Turfgrasses range from extremely salt sensitive to highly salt tolerant. However, the selection of a...
Seashore Paspalum (Paspalum vaginatum) is a warm-season halophyte with excellent salt tolerance afte...
The cause of dryland salinity and the impact on the environment and agricultural productivity of agr...
More than one billion hectares, or 7.6% of the world's land, consists of salt affected soils (1). Mu...
In southern Australia, the replacement of deep-rooted perennial native vegetation with shallow-roote...
Research was designed to reduce herbicide use by replacing post emergence herbicides with readily av...
In many arid and semiarid regions worldwide, high levels of soil salinity is a key driver of land de...
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which per...
This project built upon the successful outcomes of a previous project (TU02005) by adding to the dat...
Salt tolerant herbaceous plants potentially fill a number of vital roles in an Australian landscape ...
In February 2004, Redland Shire Council in Queensland planted a 2000 square metre demonstration area...
The need for salt-tolerant turfgrasses is ever-increasing. Rapid urban population growth has put eno...
Recent press publicity has emphasised the salt tolerance of the grass Paspalum vaginatum, which is a...
Secondary salinity (salinity induced by human activity) is a major world problem. Hydrological imbal...
In Australia, around 5.7 million hectares of agricultural land are currently affected by dryland sal...
Turfgrasses range from extremely salt sensitive to highly salt tolerant. However, the selection of a...
Seashore Paspalum (Paspalum vaginatum) is a warm-season halophyte with excellent salt tolerance afte...
The cause of dryland salinity and the impact on the environment and agricultural productivity of agr...
More than one billion hectares, or 7.6% of the world's land, consists of salt affected soils (1). Mu...
In southern Australia, the replacement of deep-rooted perennial native vegetation with shallow-roote...
Research was designed to reduce herbicide use by replacing post emergence herbicides with readily av...
In many arid and semiarid regions worldwide, high levels of soil salinity is a key driver of land de...
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which per...