Similar names: Community Seed Banks (also for other seeds)
Grass seed banks are a conservation and restoration strategy aimed at revitalizing degraded landscapes, particularly in arid and semi-arid regions. Communities can decide where they are suitable and establish them in degraded areas of about ten hectares. Grass seed banks are sowed with grass seedlings and should be naturally fenced using shrubs to protect the grasses against grazing livestock and wildlife. These seed banks serve as repositories of native grass seeds, which are essential for restoring vegetation cover in areas affected by desertification, land degradation, and biodiversity loss. They are a community-based initiative that restores degraded landscapes and provides economic opportunities for local communities, especially women. Grass seed banks can be managed and maintained by local women’s groups, who sow and harvest the grand grass seeds. Once the grasses are fully grown, they produce grass seeds, which the women can sell at local markets (for example to other restoration projects) or as fodder for livestock.
By selling the grass seeds, women can earn additional income. When grass seed bank projects are successful, the status of the women in the community can be improved. Selling the grass seeds can also help other restoration projects and thereby help to regreen other areas as well. Moreover, they can help to attract insects and small animals, which boosts local biodiversity and the growth of vegetation in the area around the seed banks.