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Indian Ricegrass Seed
Achnatherum hymenoides | SKU: PG-ORHY
What is Indian Ricegrass?
Indian Ricegrass (Achnatherum hymenoides) is a cool-season perennial bunchgrass native to the arid and semi-arid regions of western North America — one of the most widespread and ecologically significant grasses of the Great Basin and Intermountain West. It grows naturally from British Columbia south through Nevada, Utah, and Arizona to Mexico, and east into the western Great Plains — wherever soils are sandy or gravelly and annual precipitation is low. The plant forms discrete clumps (bunches) of fine, blue-green foliage 18–30 inches tall. In spring, it produces distinctive open, branched seed heads carrying small, round, black-hulled seeds — the 'rice' of its common name. It is a cool-season grass, actively growing in spring and fall and going semi-dormant during the hottest summer months. This growth cycle aligns well with the precipitation patterns of the Great Basin and Southwest, where most moisture falls in winter and spring. The genus name was changed from Oryzopsis hymenoides to Achnatherum hymenoides in modern taxonomic revisions — you may see either name used, particularly on older seed tags and literature. Both refer to the same plant. When verifying rebate program eligibility, check both scientific names as older program lists may use the former name.
Specifications
Seeding Specs
Water Needs Low
Soil Preference Sandy, gravelly, or loamy well-drained soils; excellent on slopes and sandy plains; not suited for clay or wet soils
Soil pH pH 6.5–8.5
Planting Depth 1/4–1/2 inch; no deeper
Establishment Specs
Height 12–30 inches (typically 1–2.5 ft)
Color Green foliage; straw-gold summer; ornamental open seed heads
Uses Xeriscape, erosion control, native grass restoration, sandy soil stabilization, wildlife cover
Native/Introduced Native to Great Basin, Intermountain West, and Southwest (Zones 4–9)
Why Choose This Seed?
Extreme Drought Tolerance
Indian Ricegrass survives on 6–8 inches of annual precipitation — among the lowest water requirements of any native grass in North America. In the Great Basin, plants grow in sandy desert soils that receive minimal summer rainfall and intense solar radiation. This exceptional drought tolerance comes from deep fibrous roots that extend well below the surface to access residual soil moisture and from efficient water use strategies during summer semi-dormancy. Once established after two full growing seasons, supplemental irrigation can be eliminated in most arid western locations.
Xeriscape and Rebate Qualified
Indian Ricegrass is a popular choice for water-wise and xeriscape plantings across the arid West. Some regional water utilities offer turf-replacement or water-wise landscape rebates, but eligibility is set by each program, attaches to the converted landscape rather than a seed purchase, and changes periodically — there is no single multi-state 'approved seed list.' Check your local utility's current program requirements before relying on a rebate.
Erosion Control on Sandy and Rocky Slopes
Indian Ricegrass is a primary stabilization species for sandy soils and eroding slopes across the arid West. Its dense, fibrous root system binds sandy soil particles and resists wind erosion, and it is widely used for sand and slope stabilization in arid-land reclamation. The bunchgrass growth form traps blowing sand and organic matter around each clump, gradually building microsite soil development. For sandy, unstabilized slopes in the Intermountain West, it is one of the most reliable native grass options available.
Wildlife and Ecological Value
Indian Ricegrass provides year-round wildlife habitat value. The nutritious seeds are an important food source for songbirds, quail, and small mammals — particularly in late spring and summer when few other seeds are available. The clump structure provides cover for insects, lizards, and small mammals. Pronghorn and mule deer graze young growth in spring. As a keystone Great Basin species, it supports the food web of entire desert ecosystems. Reestablishing Indian Ricegrass on degraded arid land contributes to native biodiversity recovery.
Honest About Limitations
Indian Ricegrass requires fall sowing for reliable germination — spring-seeded stands consistently underperform due to incomplete stratification. It is slow to establish: expect 2 full growing seasons before coverage is satisfying. The seed is sold by Pure Live Seed (PLS) weight — actual bag weight may differ from PLS weight depending on germination and purity. It does not perform in wet or saturated soils, and is not productive in high-rainfall regions (above 20 inches annually). Fine seed requires uniform distribution — precise broadcasting equipment or seeding by hand is recommended for small areas.
How to Plant Indian Ricegrass Seed
Site Prep
Weed control before seeding is critical. Indian Ricegrass is a slow establisher and will not compete with established weeds in year one. Kill or remove all existing vegetation with herbicide or repeated tillage 4–6 weeks before seeding. Prepare a firm, level seedbed with good seed-to-soil contact potential. Sandy and gravelly soils require minimal preparation. Clay soils should be lightly tilled and amended — though if your soil is primarily clay, consider whether this is the right grass for your site.
Seeding
Drill at 5–8 lbs PLS/acre at 1/4–1/2 inch depth for best germination. Broadcast at 8–10 lbs PLS/acre if a drill is not available, then lightly drag or rake and pack with a roller. Fall sowing (October–November) is strongly preferred. The seed is small and fine — use a broadcast spreader calibrated for fine grass seed, or distribute by hand in small areas. Avoid broadcasting in wind. After seeding, firm the seedbed with a roller or light drag to ensure seed-to-soil contact.
Establishment
Germination begins in spring (March–May) after winter stratification, and is slow and irregular over 3–8 weeks. This is normal — do not assume seeding failure if you see sparse germination in weeks 3–4. Stand density at the end of year one will look sparse and disappointing; this is expected. The root system is developing underground. By end of year two, stands reach functional density. Resist the urge to overseed aggressively in year one — wait for the natural year-two flush before evaluating success.
Long-Term Care
Established Indian Ricegrass stands are very low-maintenance. Do not fertilize — excess nitrogen promotes weedy competitor species more than the ricegrass itself. Spot-treat weeds by hand or with selective herbicides as needed in years one and two. Once the stand is closed, weed pressure diminishes naturally. Burning or mowing in late fall can rejuvenate old stands and stimulate new growth the following spring — a practice used in native grass restoration. Avoid overgrazing; established stands tolerate moderate grazing but require recovery periods.
Helpful Resources
How to Seed and Establish a Xeriscape
Xeriscape Lawn Maintenance Guide
Questions & Answers
Why is fall planting so important for Indian Ricegrass?
Indian Ricegrass is slow and erratic to germinate because of a hard, thick seed coat (hull) plus embryo dormancy — cold-moist stratification alone typically gives only partial germination. Best results come from properly conditioned or scarified seed combined with cold-moist stratification. Fall planting (October–November) helps: seed chills over winter in the soil and many seeds germinate the following spring, though germination is rarely uniform. If you cannot plant in fall, cold-stratify seed in the refrigerator for 60–90 days before spring planting, and expect establishment over two growing seasons rather than a quick, even stand.
What does PLS mean on the seed tag?
PLS stands for Pure Live Seed — a standardized measure of how much of the seed in the bag is actually pure, viable, living seed. It accounts for both seed purity (percent of the bag that is actually the target species, not weed seed or inert matter) and germination rate (percent of those seeds that are alive and capable of germinating). The seeding rates listed for Indian Ricegrass (5–10 lbs/acre) are PLS-based rates, not bulk weight rates. The actual bulk weight needed will be higher if the seed lot has lower purity or germination. Your seed tag will show the purity and germination percentages needed to calculate the bulk weight equivalent.
Can Indian Ricegrass be used as a lawn grass substitute?
Indian Ricegrass is not a traditional lawn grass and should not be expected to function as one. It forms a bunchgrass — discrete clumps separated by open soil — rather than a continuous turf sod. In xeriscape and native landscape designs, this open bunchgrass structure is a valued aesthetic, often combined with decomposed granite, rock mulch, or other native species between clumps. It will not fill in to form a continuous mat like Buffalograss or Bermudagrass. For a low-water lawn alternative in a continuous-cover sense, Buffalograss (W-BUDA) is a better choice. Indian Ricegrass is best used as a textural accent, mass planting in natural areas, or erosion control on slopes.
What animals eat or use Indian Ricegrass?
Indian Ricegrass is ecologically important to a wide range of wildlife in the Great Basin and Southwest. Historically, the seeds were a critical food source for many Native American tribes and remain a significant food source for songbirds (horned larks, sparrows), quail, and small rodents in arid ecosystems. Pronghorn antelope, mule deer, and domestic livestock graze the young spring foliage. Jackrabbits and prairie dogs consume the foliage and seeds. The clump structure provides shelter and nesting microhabitat for lizards, insects, and ground-nesting birds. It is one of the foundational plant species supporting Great Basin food webs.
Is Indian Ricegrass the same as Oryzopsis hymenoides?
Yes — Oryzopsis hymenoides is the former scientific name for Indian Ricegrass. Modern botanical taxonomy reclassified it to Achnatherum hymenoides based on molecular and morphological analysis. Both names refer to exactly the same plant. Older seed tags, academic literature, extension publications, and rebate program plant lists may use either name. When verifying rebate eligibility, check both Achnatherum hymenoides and Oryzopsis hymenoides to ensure you find the correct listing on potentially older program documents. Our seed tags use the current accepted name: Achnatherum hymenoides.
How long does Indian Ricegrass live once established?
Indian Ricegrass is a long-lived perennial. Individual plants in undisturbed native stands are estimated to live 50–100 years or more under favorable conditions. In landscape settings, established plants can persist for decades with minimal care. The bunchgrass growth form means individual clumps can be divided and transplanted if needed, though division of established plants is rarely done in practice. The main threats to established stands are prolonged saturated soil conditions, aggressive weed competition in early establishment, and overgrazing without adequate recovery periods. In well-matched site conditions, this is a plant-once-and-enjoy-for-decades species.
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