Guaranteed from Seed: Difference between revisions
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In a 3,000 square foot research shade house, the college has been developing seed propagation methods for species that are over-harvested from the wild. This program is identified as “Guaranteed From Seed—Never Wild Harvested.” Plants are available through the nursery trade and will educate the public about the importance of protecting wild plant populations from overharvesting. Plants started to be available to the public in 2021. | In a 3,000 square foot research shade house, the college has been developing seed propagation methods for species that are over-harvested from the wild. This program is identified as “Guaranteed From Seed—Never Wild Harvested.” Plants are available through the nursery trade and will educate the public about the importance of protecting wild plant populations from overharvesting. Plants started to be available to the public in 2021. | ||
[[Avl herb festival]] | |||
[[Biomedicinal pipeline]] | |||
The [[seed bank hidden in the soil]] indigenous land management brings it out. Native plants return once invasives are removed. Link [https://www.hcn.org/issues/56-3/underground-seed-banks-hold-promise-for-ecological-restoration/] | |||
[[Third party certifications]] | |||
[[Guidelines to ethical wild seed collections]] link [https://ncwildflower.org/wp-content/uploads/Seed-Saving-Instructions.pdf] | |||
[[Seed Collectives]] | |||
{{backlinks}} | {{backlinks}} |
Latest revision as of 07:07, 16 March 2024
Link Warren Wilson’s Guaranteed from Seed biomedicinal propagation system. [1]
In a 3,000 square foot research shade house, the college has been developing seed propagation methods for species that are over-harvested from the wild. This program is identified as “Guaranteed From Seed—Never Wild Harvested.” Plants are available through the nursery trade and will educate the public about the importance of protecting wild plant populations from overharvesting. Plants started to be available to the public in 2021.
The seed bank hidden in the soil indigenous land management brings it out. Native plants return once invasives are removed. Link [2]
Guidelines to ethical wild seed collections link [3]
Links to this page
- Initial design of the Watershed Fund (← links)
- WatershedDividend (← links)
- Act Local School (← links)
- Western Carolina local plants conference (← links)
- Healing Local Economies (← links)
- North Carolina Native Plant Society (← links)
- Warren Wilson (← links)
- Eagle,Neberecon g2i platform (← links)