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Friday, November 29, 2024

New drought-resistant bermuda grass created by UC Riverside – Whittier Daily News

UC Riverside and a Riverside-based sod company have teamed up to sell a new drought-resistant bermuda grass.

The grass, called Coachella, is a less thirsty, greener-longer hybrid of bermuda grass.

The university’s Office of Technology Partnerships and West Coast Turf hope to initially target golf courses and sports stadiums that need large amounts of real grass.

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It is the first bermuda grass to come from the university’s turfgrass breeding program, which was rebooted in 2012 after a long hiatus, a UCR news release states. It is the UC system’s only turfgrass program.

The grass “exhibits our targeted traits of improved winter color retention, exemplary drought resistance above and beyond most existing bermuda grass cultivars and, of course, exceptional quality characteristics,” Jim Baird, a UCR professor and cooperative extension specialist in turfgrass science, said in the Monday, Nov. 25, release.

When UCR develops turfgrass, it’s looking at several factors: pest tolerance, drought tolerance, how well it spreads, and its recovery from environmental and human impacts, the release states.

But Baird said in the release that the biggest factor behind Coachella was the development of what he called “winter color retention.”

“Californians don’t like brown or dormant grass; warm-season grasses like bermuda grass turn in the winter months,” Baird said in the release. “Coachella is a significant step in the right direction in terms of maintaining better turf color and quality year-round with a lot less water. Essentially, we now have turfgrasses that use as little or less water than the so-called lawn replacement plants or groundcovers.”

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