PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Dreesen, David R AU - Fenchel, Gregory A TI - Deep-planting techniques to establish riparian vegetation in arid and semiarid regions AID - 10.2979/NPJ.2010.11.1.15 DP - 2010 Mar 20 TA - Native Plants Journal PG - 15--22 VI - 11 IP - 1 4099 - http://npj.uwpress.org/content/11/1/15.short 4100 - http://npj.uwpress.org/content/11/1/15.full SO - NATIVE PLANTS JOURNAL2010 Mar 20; 11 AB - Invasion by exotic woody species and disruption of natural hydrologic conditions require the restoration of native riparian plant communities along rivers and streams in the Southwest. Successful establishment of phreatophytic riparian plant species has been accomplished using deep-planting techniques that involve the immediate exploitation of capillary fringe moisture by the existing root system of nursery stock or the adventitious root system of a cutting. These techniques, which require minimal or no post-planting irrigation in arid and semiarid regions, include the planting of dormant pole cuttings, dormant whip cuttings, tallpots with long root systems, as well as long-stem nursery stock whose root crowns are deeply buried.