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Juncaceae (Juncus)



Juncus (arcticus)


Juncaceae

Rush


Juncus

arcticus






Juncus

balticus






Arctic rush, mountain rush

JUARL

Mt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington

Mountain rush is widespread throughout temperate regions in the northern hemisphere. It occurs throughout California to Alaska, eastern North America, and Eurasia. Mountain rush is the most widespread and common rush found in the Great Basin and dry Intermountain regions. Mountain rush is often found in wetland habitats, but will grow in any standing water to seasonally dry places, at elevations generally below 2,200 m (7,200 ft)


Plants

Seed

Container (plug)

107 ml (6.5 in3) container

10 weeks

Stock Type: Container seedling. Well-developed crown and firm plug in container.

Seed may be collected by hand, using a pair of hand shears, or with a gas-powered handheld seed harvester. The tiny, black seeds are easily lost from the capsules when collecting by hand. Be careful to keep capsules upright before putting in collection bag. Use paper sacks when collecting seeds for this species.

To clean the seed, run the collection through a hammer mill to break up debris and knock the seeds loose. Use a 1/20 inch screen on the top and a solid sheet on the bottom of the seed cleaner. Adjust the airflow to blow off the chaff. The cleaning process can be speeded up by shaking the hammer milled collection to settle seed to the bottom of the pan. The top portion of the chaff can then be discarded and the seed-rich mixture that is left in the bottom can be run through the seed cleaner.

Due to small seed size and short growing season, seeds are mixed with sand and sown directly into target containers. Growing medium used in these cells consists of 40:20:20:20 peat:composted fir bark:perlite:pumice with Nutricote controlled release fertilizer (18N:6P2O5:8K2O with minors; 140-d release rate at 21C) at the rate of 0.5 gram Nutricote per 107 ml container. Entire racks are sealed inside plastic bags and placed into refrigeration at 1 to 3 °C for 90 days. Cells are checked weekly and kept moist throughout the stratification period.

Greenhouse growing facility. Racks are removed from stratification facilities and placed directly into greenhouses in mid-July. No additional time-release fertilizer is added to medium. Cells are irrigated lightly several times per day to ensure seeds are kept quite moist throughout the germination period.

Germination is uniform and is usually complete in 1 to 2 weeks. Following germination, plants are fertilized with soluble 12-2-14-6Ca-3Mg at 100 ppm for 1 week.

2 weeks

Plants grow quickly during the active growth phase Soluble fertilizer 20-9-20 NPK at 150 ppm is applied weekly for 8 weeks.

8 weeks

No dry-down is done to induce dormancy. Seedlings are moved to an outdoor growing area in mid-September.

2 to 3 weeks

Harvest Date: Mid-October Storage Conditions: Seedlings are usually outplanted in fall. No storage except in outdoor growing area. Plants are well irrigated prior to shipping and shipped in containers.



Wetland classification: FACW Juncus species can tolerate shade and flooded, anoxic soil conditions, at least periodically. They can also tolerate mild to moderate soil salinities and alkaline to calcareous soils. Often these plants are found on drier or seasonally fluctuating wetland sites (for example, desert playas) and can tolerate seasonal drought.

Dorena Genetic Resource Center Propagation Records, unpublished. [NRCS] USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service. Juncus arcticus Willd. ssp. littoralis (Engelm.) Hultén mountain rush. URL: https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=JUARL (accessed 20 Sep 2018). Stevens M, Hoag C, Tilley D, St. John L. 2012. Plant guide for mountain rush (Juncus arcticus ssp. littoralis. Aberdeen (ID): USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Aberdeen Plant Materials Center. URL: https://plants.usda.gov/plantguide/pdf/pg_juarl.pdf (accessed 6 Oct 2018).

Riley, Lee E.; Klocke, Allison. 2018. Propagation protocol for production of Container (plug) Juncus arcticus Plants 107 ml (6.5 in3) container; USDA FS - Dorena Genetic Resource Center Cottage Grove, Oregon. In: Native Plant Network. URL: https://NativePlantNetwork.org (accessed 2025/04/25). US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, National Center for Reforestation, Nurseries, and Genetic Resources.