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Tifquik Certified Bahia Grass Seeds
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Tifquik Certified Bahia Grass Seeds 40 Lbs |
Tifquik Certified Bahia Grass Seeds 20 Lbs |
Tifquik Certified Bahia Grass Seeds 2 Lbs |
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$255.95
Free Fed Ex Shipping |
$129.95 Free Fed Ex Shipping |
$19.95 Free USPS Priority Shipping |
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- Available
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- Available
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Tifquik Certified Bahia 75%
Faster Germination
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Shiloh Farms - TifQuik Bahia
Grass Seed
Shiloh Farms is a major
producer of grass seed
located in Springfield,
GA, near historic
Savannah. It has
been a family-owned
business for over three
decades and currently
has two generations
working on the farm.
For most of its
existence, the company
has been producing,
cleaning and processing
certified seed.
In
the late 1990s, Shiloh
Farms began producing
certified Tifton 9 bahia
grass seed. Since
then, they have become
the largest producer of
certified grass bahia
seed in the Southeast,
known for their quality
and seed production.
In
2005, the Georgia Seed
Development Commission
chose Shiloh Farms to
produce the first
large-scale
TifQuik
foundation seed plot in
Georgia. Because
of Shiloh Farms'
location and sandy
soils,
TifQuik is
well-suited to the area.
Since Shiloh Farms has
been producing
TifQuik, they have
discovered that it is a
very hardy cultivar,
being able to produce
more tonnage with less
fertilizer and less
precipitation than other
warm season grasses,
including Tifton 9.
TifQuik also
emerges faster, and
therefore covers the
field faster than Tifton
9, eliminating the
opportunity for weed
seed to emerge and
provides for earlier
grazing and earlier
harvesting.
Shiloh's observations of
TifQuik confirm
the research that Bill
Anderson of the USDA-ARS
Genetics and Breeding
Unit in Tifton, GA has
experienced with his
greenhouse studies and
replicated outdoor plots
in Tifton.
When
you are looking for
bahia grass seed, be
sure to contact Shiloh
Farms, Inc.
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TifQuik Bahia Grass Seed
released by the USDA and UGA
(University of Georgia),
TifQuik
Bahia Grass shows great promise for
forage growers who wish to get a
jump on weeds and extend their
grazing and hay production season.
Features of
TifQuik Bahia Grass For Pasture
- Reduced
hard seed - providing quick
establishment
- Faster
Germination - 75% Faster than
Tifton9 and Pensacola Bahia
Grass in field trials
- Early
Spring Frost Recovery
- TifQuik
seeded pastures will be covered
earlier
- Grazing or
hay removal can be started
sooner
- Higher
initial yields
- Dry matter
yields were 2 times higher than
Tifton9 and 4 times higher than
Pensacola 2 months after
planting - See Chart Below
Planting Information For TifQuik
Bahia Grass Seed
Planting Date: Spring -
Mid-Summer
Planting Depth: 1/8 - 1/4
inch. Do not plant any deeper or
seed will not germinate.
Seeding Rate: 25 to 30
lb/acre
TifQuik Bahia
Grass Yield Comparison Table
Dry Matter Yield - Year 1 (2003)
| |
July 8 |
Aug.13 |
Sept.19 |
Oct.22 |
TOTAL |
| TifQuik |
3128a |
3332a |
1903a |
1180a |
9230a |
| Tifton
9 |
1539b |
3098a |
1590a |
937ab |
7467ab |
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Pensacola |
797b |
2728a |
1516a |
808b |
5850b |
Development of
TifQuik Bahia Grass
Forage growers would naturally like
to get the jump on weeds and extend
their forage production season. So
Agricultural Research Service
geneticist Bill Anderson of the Crop
Genetics and Breeding Research Unit
in Tifton, Georgia, and his
colleagues have developed a new
bahiagrass (Paspalum notatum)
cultivar that may help them do just
that.
Released by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) and the
University of Georgia (UGA) TifQuik
has great promise as a forage grass
in the Southeast. Currently, Tifton
9 bahiagrass, another USDA/UGA
variety, developed by the late Glenn
Burton, an ARS Hall of Fame member,
is widely grown for forage, with
good results. But the TifQuik
cultivar is even better.
“TifQuik was developed to have
reduced hard seed and thus faster
germination and field establishment
than Tifton 9,” says Anderson.
“These features mean that a
TifQuik-seeded pasture will be
covered earlier, and grazing or hay
removal can be performed sooner—with
higher initial yields.”
The bahiagrass cultivars now grown
have a considerable amount of hard
seed and thus require 2-3 weeks to
establish a full stand. During this
time, weeds may infest the pasture,
and moisture for forage seed
germination may be restricted.
In developing TifQuik, the sole
criterion for selection of plants
was fast germination. It took 4
years to achieve the desired
qualities. Former ARS agronomist
Roger Gates and retired geneticist
Wayne Hanna performed the four
selection cycles, beginning with
Tifton 9. During each cycle, enough
seed was planted from the previous
one to obtain 1,000 seedlings that
germinated within the first week.
Seedlings were transplanted to clay
pots in the greenhouse and then to a
fumigated field to establish a
nursery. Plants were allowed to
cross-pollinate, seed was
hand-harvested, and that seed was
then used to start the final cycle,
the following spring, in a
greenhouse. The four cycles were
completed in 2002, and the seed from
2002 was used to establish
greenhouse germination tests and a
replicated field test and to begin
seed increase.
In the greenhouse studies,
germination of TifQuik averaged five
times more than Tifton 9 after 6
days and three times more after 8
days. In the field studies, TifQuik
emerged about 75 percent faster
after 1 week than Tifton 9 and
Pensacola, another commonly used
forage bahiagrass. After 4 weeks,
TifQuik plants were taller than both
Tifton 9 and Pensacola. Dry-matter
yields of TifQuik were two times
higher than Tifton 9 and four times
higher than Pensacola for the first
clipping, which was done 2 months
after planting.
“TifQuik will be particularly
valuable to growers who wish to
include bahiagrass in a sod-based
rotation system with row crops such
as peanut and cotton in the
southeastern United States,” says
Anderson. “Bahiagrass has been shown
to reduce nematode and disease
problems in subsequent crops, and it
should provide many forage growers
with another tool to make their
operations more efficient and,
hopefully, more profitable.”
—By Sharon Durham, Agricultural
Research Service Information Staff.
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