Sea Isle 2000 - Fairways and Greens
Scientific name: Paspalum vaginatum
Other names: Species common names: Seashore paspalum, salt water couch
Cultivar name: Sea Isle 2000
Characteristics: Seashore Paspalum is the premier grass for badly salt-affected sites where other turfgrasses struggle to survive or die. It will grow across a wide range of soil pH from very acid to alkaline. Like the couches, it is a medium-textured turf best suited to short mowing heights (around 15-30 mm). Seashore paspalum has good drought and wear tolerance, and is more shade tolerant than the couches. It survives at low fertility, but responds well to added fertiliser with nitrogen in the nitrate form.
Origin: Selected in Georgia (the United States) by Dr Ronny R Duncan, University of Georgia. Germplasm collected from a golf course in Florida (US), and probably a chance seedling from Adalayd.
Global growing areas: US, Australia and the Pacific, Africa, Asia, Middle East, South America and the Caribbean.
One head licensee in Australia, with additional sub-licensees.
IP protection: US PP 12, 625. Australian PBR certificate #2392 (granted 25 February 2004).
Details
- Texture: Fine
- Description: Dark green leaves with a shiny lustre due to a waxy leaf coating. Fine leaves, blades 50 mm long, 0.5-1.5 mm in width, tapering to a narrow point. Short internodes on stolons (5 mm). Stolon nodes have hairs. (data from Plant Patent description).
- Use: Lawns, parks, sportsfields and golf courses (fairways, tees and greens) on salt-affected soils. Revegetation of salt-affected sites.
- Mowing height: Tolerates close mowing to 4mm (greens height), but up to 15-20 mm on fairways, parks and sportsfields.
- Method of propagation: Vegetative sod, sprigging.
- Preferred soil types: Grows in a wide range of soils from sands through to clays, and from pH 4.0 to 10.0.
Comments
Spreads vigorously by both rhizomes and stolons. Tolerates water logging and occasional flooding with salt water. Fewer seed heads than older cultivars Adalayd and Saltene. Requires lower fertiliser inputs than Cynodon dactylon (green couch). Copes with lowered light intensity due to cloud cover.
Tolerances
- Heat: Good.
- Cold: Comparable to green couch.
- Shade: Limited tolerance of shade (comparable to green couch). Does not tolerate tree shade.
- Drought: Fair tolerance of dry conditions.
- Salinity: Highly salt tolerant. Survives at 40 dS m-1.
- Wear: Copes well with greens foot traffic.
- Herbicide sensitivity: Sensitive to many of the herbicides used for the management of green couch. Use only registered herbicides in accordance with the label.
- Pests and diseases: Lawn grubs (army worm, sod webworm) particularly during summer and autumn.
- Shows resistance to dollar spot.
Photos used on this page are not necessarily photos from DEEDI
For more information and updates on warm season turfgrasses, their production and management please go to http://www.dpi.qld.gov.au/turf
For updates on Sea Isle 2000 please go tohttp://www.dpi.qld.gov.au/26_4216.htm
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