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Research ArticleRefereed Research

Microsite and rooting depth are more important than water-holding gel for establishment of restoration plantings of Ilex vomitoria on barrier islands in the Gulf of Mexico

Mack Thetford, Debbie L Miller, Lesley W Atwood and Barry O Ballard
Native Plants Journal, June 2015, 16 (2) 77-86; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/npj.16.2.77
Mack Thetford
, Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida West Florida Research and Education Center 5988 Hwy 90 Milton, FL 32583
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  • For correspondence: thetford{at}ufl.edu
Debbie L Miller
, Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida West Florida Research and Education Center 5988 Hwy 90 Milton, FL 32583
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  • For correspondence: dlmi{at}ufl.edu
Lesley W Atwood
Department of Natural Resources, NRESS Program University of New Hampshire, 114 James Hall, 56 College Road Durham, New Hampshire 03824,
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  • For correspondence: Lesley.atwood{at}wildcats.unh.edu
Barry O Ballard
Department of Environmental Horticulture, University of Florida West Florida Research and Education Center, 5988 Hwy 90, Milton, FL 32583
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Native Plants Journal: 16 (2)
Native Plants Journal
Vol. 16, Issue 2
20 Jun 2015
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Microsite and rooting depth are more important than water-holding gel for establishment of restoration plantings of Ilex vomitoria on barrier islands in the Gulf of Mexico
Mack Thetford, Debbie L Miller, Lesley W Atwood, Barry O Ballard
Native Plants Journal Jun 2015, 16 (2) 77-86; DOI: 10.3368/npj.16.2.77

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Microsite and rooting depth are more important than water-holding gel for establishment of restoration plantings of Ilex vomitoria on barrier islands in the Gulf of Mexico
Mack Thetford, Debbie L Miller, Lesley W Atwood, Barry O Ballard
Native Plants Journal Jun 2015, 16 (2) 77-86; DOI: 10.3368/npj.16.2.77
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Keywords

  • barrier island restoration
  • hydrogel
  • Treepot
  • swale
  • yaupon
  • polyacrylamide gel
  • Aquifoliaceae
  • Plants: USDA NRCS (2013)
  • Animals: ITIS (2015)
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