Native lawns in Texas often display the fine, curly, blue-green leaves
of buffalograss, curly mesquite, grama and needlegrasses. Of these, buffalograss
produces the most uniform and attractive turf.
Buffalograss, Buchloe dactyloides, is a perennial grass native to
the Great Plains from Montana to Mexico. In Texas, it is commonly found
from South Texas to the Texas Panhandle; but is rarely found on the sandy
soils in the eastern part of the state or in the high rainfall areas of
southeast Texas. It is one of the grasses that supported the great herds
of buffalo that roamed the Great Plains. Buffalograss also provided the
sod from which early settlers built their houses.
Buffalograss is, perhaps, our only truly native turfgrass. Its tolerance
to prolonged droughts and to extreme temperatures together with its seed
producing characteristics enables buffalograss to survive extreme environmental
conditions. Overgrazing and, in the case of turf, over use or excessive
traffic are the pressures that lead to the deterioration of a stand of buffalograss.
Buffalograss spreads by surface runners, or stolons, and seed. It forms
a fine textured, relatively thin turf with a soft blue-green color. It does
not possess underground stems, or rhizomes. Buffalograss is also destroyed
quite readily by cultivation. For these reasons, it can be readily removed
from flower beds and gardens.
Description. Buffalograss is a low growing, commonly only 8 to 10
inches high, warm season perennial grass. Individual leaf blades may reach
10 to 12 inches in length, but they fall over and give the turf a short
appearance. Buffalograss has a stoloniferous growth habit, curly leaves,
and both staminate and pistillate flowers. Staminate (male) plants have
2 to 3 flag-like, one-sided spikes on a seedstalk 4 to 6 inches high. Spikelets,
usually 10, are 4 mm long in two rows on one side of the rachis.
Pistillate (female) plants appear very different from the staminate plants.
Pistillate spikelets are in a short spike or head and included in the inflated
sheaths of the upper leaves. The thickened rachis is woody and surrounded
by the outer glumes. The glumes together with the lemma and palea form a
bur-like enclosure for the mature seed.
Both male and female plants have stolons from several inches to several
feet in length, internodes 2 to 3 inches long, and nodes with tufts of short
leaves. Plants often take root at the node and produce new shoots. Each
plant propagates vegetatively its own kind, and only rarely are both male
and female flowers produced on the same plant. Commonly each kind of plant
is found in patches some distance apart.
Female Plant (left), male plant (right) bur or seed (insert)
As buffalograss and curly mesquite are both low growing, stononiferous grasses
with curly leaves, some difficulty may be encountered in distinguishing
them. If the grasses are not in flower, they can be identified by their
nodes and internodes. Nodes of buffalograss are smooth, and those of curly
mesquite are villous. Also, the internodes of buffalograss are quite short
(less than 3 inches) while those of curly mesquite are quite long.
The production and utilization of buffalograss is hampered by poor germination
of the seed, or bur. It has been suggested that poor germination is due
to the mechanical restraint imposed on the embryo by the tough enclosing
outer glumes. The fact that seed extracted from the bur readily germinate
is cited as evidence of inhibitor substances in the glumes that delay germination
of the seed.
Adaptation and Use. Buffalograss is found throughout the Great Plains
from Mexico to Montana. In Texas, buffalograss is commonly found from the
south central region westward to El Paso and north to the High Plains and
Rolling Plains. It favors the heavy clay soils in moderate to low rainfall
areas. Buffalograss is rare in the sandy soils of east Texas and the high
rainfall areas of southeast Texas.
When buffalograss is planted in high rainfall areas or when it is irrigated
and fertilized, bermudagrass and other weedy grasses invade a stand of buffalograss.
Buffalograss is best adapted to low rainfall areas (15 to 30 inches annually)
or areas that receive thorough, but infrequent irrigation.
Buffalograss is not adapted to shaded sites or to sites that receive heavy
traffic. Also, under intensive management bermudagrass and other more aggressive
grasses tend to replace buffalograss in the lawn.
Roadsides, school grounds, parks, open lawn areas, golf course roughs and
cemeteries are good sites for buffalograss in central, west and north Texas.
Buffalograss is particularly well suited for sites to be planted to bluebonnets
and other Texas wildflowers since it produces a relatively open, thin turf
and requires little mowing. It is the ideal grass for those wanting a "native"
landscape.
Establishment. Buffalograss can be established from seed (burs) or
sod. Buffalograss established from seed develops into patches of male and
female plants, with the male plants producing the seedstalks that may appear
unsightly in lawns. When planting buffalograss vegetatively, female plants
are generally selected since they do not produce the taller seedstalks.
Prairie and 609 buffalograsses are female plant selections released by the
Texas andNebraska Agricultural Experiment Stations in 1990. They produce
a more dense and uniform turf than common types. Prairie and 609 buffalograsses
must be established from sod or sod plugs.
When planting seed, seed treatment, seeding rate and date of seeding are
important considerations. Treated seed, seed chilled at 5 to 10 degrees
for 6 to 8 weeks or treated chemically to break dormancy, have a much higher
germination rate (80% to 90%) than untreated seed (20%). For spring and
summer plantings, treated seed should be planted.
April and May are the best months to plant treated buffalograss seeds as
temperatures are favorable and moisture is generally adequate. With irrigation
the planting date can be extended into July and August.
Fall plantings of untreated buffalograss seed are also successful, but maximum
germination does not occur until the following spring.
Treated seed planted in May will germinate in 7 to 10 days if moisture is
adequate. Without irrigation the seed will remain dormant until moisture
is favorable. Seed planted in dry conditions without irrigation should be
drilled inch into a well prepared seedbed. Seed broadcast on the surface
may germinate when little or no subsurface moisture is present to sustain
the young seedlings.
Seeding rates may range from less than 0.5 pounds of seed per 1,000 sq.
ft. to 4 to 6 pounds, depending on the method of planting and the time available
to obtain a cover. Seeding rates are generally much higher for broadcast
seeding on the soil surface than for that drilled in rows into the seedbed.
Buffalograss seed drilled in rows at 10 to 20 lbs. per acre will produce
a complete cover in one growing season with favorable moisture conditions.
With no irrigation, broadcast seedling rates of 1 to 2 lbs. per 1,000 sq.
ft. may require several seasons to develop a complete cover. In contrast,
broadcast seeding rates of 4 to 6 lbs. per 1,000 sq. ft. will cover in several
months with adequate moisture.
For sites that cannot be irrigated during establishment, recommended seeding
rates would be 0.5 lb. per 1,000 sq. ft. if drilled and 2 to 4 lbs. per
1,000 sq. ft. if broadcast. If irrigated, areas could be planted at °
the rate recommended for nonirrigated sites. All of the seeding rates are
for planting treated seed in late spring and summer for lawns, golf courses
or other well maintained areas of turf. Roadsides, parks and other low maintenance
areas can be planted at 10 to 20 lbs. of seed per acre.
Fall plantings using untreated seed should be at rates of 2 to 4 lbs. per
1,000 sq. ft. of lawn or turf area. Significant germination should not be
expected until the following spring or summer when moisture is favorable.
Buffalograss can be established from pieces of sod or sod plugs not less
than 2 inches square. These should be planted on a well prepared seedbed
in about 18-inch rows. Plants can be spaced anywhere from 6 inches to 2
feet apart, depending on how quickly a complete cover is desired. The closer
they are spaced, the sooner the ground will be covered. In digging up material
for planting care should be taken to keep the roots moist as the plants
die very quickly when the roots get dry. When planting, dig a hole deep
enough to set the plants in so that the grass is above ground level. If
the pieces of sod are covered with soil, they will die. The soil should
be packed around the plants. Planting is best done in moist soil or where
irrigation is available. The grass should be planted in early fall, spring
or early summer, when moisture is favorable. Plants should be well watered
after planting and as needed for several weeks, thereafter.
Management. Buffalograss is only recommended for low maintenance,
low use turfgrass areas. It does not persist where use is intensive. Consequently,
only minimum maintenance practices are required to keep a buffalograss turf.
Mowing height and frequency depend on the use of the site. In lawns, buffalograss
can be mowed at heights of 2 to 3 inches. At the shorter heights weekly
mowing may be required to keep a buffalograss turf.
On irrigated golf course fairways, buffalograss is mowed weekly at inch.
Without irrigation, it is mowed only as needed at a 1 inch height. In rough
areas on golf courses, buffalograss is mowed only as needed at the heights
between 2 and 3 inches.
Buffalograss does not need fertilization, but it will respond to light applications
of nitrogen. Nitrogen fertilization should not exceed 2 lbs. of nitrogen
per 1,000 sq. ft. per year. If bermudagrass is undesirable in the lawn,
avoid nitrogen fertilization.
With irrigation, buffalograss will remain green throughout the spring and
summer. One inch of water per week is adequate to maintain a green buffalograss
turf. Without irrigation, buffalograss will turn brown and dormant during
the dry summer months. As with fertilization, excessive water promotes bermudagrass
encroachment.
Prairie Buffalograss Licensees
Crenshaw Turf Farms
P.O. Box 950
Bastrop, Texas
512/303-4670 78602
Contact: Kelly Hensley
H Bar H Turf Farms
Rt. 2, Box 10
Amarillo, Texas 797101
806/622-0861
Contact: Amy Smith
Milberger Turf Farms
Rt. 1, Box 229
Bay City, Texas 77414
409/245-8175 or 245/7521
Contact: Arthur Milberger
Rod Farm
Rt. 1, Box 68
El Campo, Texas 77437
409/543-9023
Contact: Glenn Rod
Thomas Brothers Grass Company
Rt. 3, Box 487
Granbury, Texas 76048
817/573-2404
Contact: Ike Thomas
Trinity Turf Nursery
P. O. Box 811
Pilot Point, Texas 76258
817/686-2000
Contact: Doug O'Connor
Wharton Turf-Grass, Incorporated
Box 1029
Wharton, Texas 77488
409/532-4340
Contact: Charles Davis