United States Department of Agriculture
Natural Resources Conservation Service
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Critical and Disturbed Areas

Updated 07/11/2008

Highly disturbed areas, such as those associated with minelands, saline sites, roadsides and highly acidic sites, are very susceptible to invasion by noxious weeds. Several PMCs are evaluating native plants which are especially adapted to these difficult sites to help prevent infestation by noxious weeds such as knapweed species, Canada thistle and cogongrass.

Difficult environmental conditions, eroding streambanks, land impacted by wildfires, mineland reclamation sites, arid rangelands, require finding the right plants for the job. The Plant Materials Program is a nationwide network of 27 Plant Materials Centers and 17 Plant Materials Specialists, based in ecologically distinct service areas.  Together, these centers and specialists seek out plants and state-of-the-art technology to restore critical habitats, mitigate environmental concerns, and sustain healthy natural resources.

Related Publications

These documents require Acrobat Reader.

The Use of Native Warm Season Grasses for Critical Area Stabilization. (PDF; 36 KB) Miller, C.F. and J.A. Dickerson. 1999. Proceedings of the Second Eastern Native Grass Symposium, Nov. 17-19, 1999, Baltimore, MD, Baltimore, MD. 7p. (ID# 405)

Ten years of testing indigenous plant material on drastically disturbed land in western Montana. (PDF; 436 KB) Majerus, S. etal. 2005. Watershed Day, Helena, Montana, Bozeman, MT. 1p. (ID# 6009)

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