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Sports Turf and Amenity Grasses

A Manual for Use and Identification

Sports Turf and Amenity Grasses  
David E Aldous  
Ian H Chivers  

Colour illustrations, Colour photographs, Index
120 pages
Publisher: Landlinks Press
2002


    Hardback - ISBN: 0643066667 - AU $85.00
 
Description  | Features  | Contents  | Sample  | Readership  | Reviews  | Author Information  | Related Titles  | Related Categories

Description
Sports Turf and Amenity Grasses is a comprehensive reference for anyone involved with the selection and maintenance of grasses used in sports and amenity areas in all areas. It provides a means to identify these grasses through keys, descriptions and photographs, and also provides detailed information on sowing, oversowing, stolonising and mowing heights.

The performance of each grass is assessed and detailed comments made on positive and negative aspects of its use. A grass’s tolerance to high temperature, frost, drought, shade, wet soil, salinity, low soil fertility, wear and close mowing is given in a table with each aspect rated. Further comments are made on how well it combines with particular grasses and on issues such as seedling vigour and sowing times.

Features

  • Species are divided into Cool-season grasses and Warm-season grasses
  • Major grasses are listed by country in a table
  • Covers identification, management, and assessment

Contents
Preface
Turfgrass identification

Turfgrass terminology
Using a visual key
Visual Key to common turfgrasses
Descriptions of the major sports turf and amenity grasses
Cool-season grasses
Warm-season grasses
Descriptions of some minor sports turf and amenity grasses
Cool-season grasses
Warm-season grasses
References
Index

Sample
View an extract from Sports Turf and Amenity Grasses.

The extract is in Adobe Acrobat format (898 kb). The Acrobat Reader can be obtained from Adobe's website.

You may download and view this sample but you may not mass-transmit it nor use it or any part of it for commercial gain. It is protected by all applicable copyright laws.

Reviews
“A must for sports, golf and turf managers.”
Landscape Australia 24(4) 2002

Readership
Primary audience: Golf course superintendents, turfgrass growers and consultants, sportsground and racecourse curators, landscape contractors, ornamental horticulturists and municipal officers.

Secondary audience: Horticulture students, TAFE college libraries and public libraries

Author Information
David E. Aldous is a Principal Lecturer in the Department of Resource Management, Forestry and Amenity Horticulture, Institute of Land and Food Resources, The University of Melbourne-Burnley Campus.

He is a Fellow of Parks and Leisure Australia, and is a member of the Australian Society of Horticultural Science, the International Society for Horticultural Science, and the International Turfgrass Society. In 1998 he was installed as the World President, of the International Federation of Park and Recreation Administration (IFPRA).

Ian Chivers is a private consultant and grass breeder/seed producer based in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. He has worked in many parts of the world with both the cool season and warm season grasses. His particular expertise is in breeding and selection programmes for the less-well known grasses. This has led to the commercialisation of several species previously unknown for turf use. Within those species his work has led to the development of several varieties.

Ian is currently a Board member of the International Turfgrass Society, a contributor to several references and commonly seen as a conference speaker.

Related Titles

Related Categories
Landlinks : Horticulture

  
 


 
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