Overall Rating Gold
Overall Score 66.77
Liaison Paul Edlund
Submission Date May 31, 2023

STARS v2.2

Montana State University
OP-9: Landscape Management

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 1.00 / 2.00 Edward Hook
Environmental Services Manager
University Facilities Services
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Total campus area:
956 Acres

Figures required to calculate the total area of managed grounds:
Area (double-counting is not allowed)
Area managed organically, without the use of inorganic fertilizers and chemical pesticides, fungicides and herbicides 0 Acres
Area managed in accordance with an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) program that uses selected chemicals only when needed 210 Acres
Area managed using conventional, chemical-based landscape management practices 0 Acres
Total area of managed grounds 210 Acres

If the total area of managed grounds is less than the total campus area, provide:

A brief description of any land excluded from the area of managed grounds:
Experimental agriculture lands are excluded from the area of managed grounds.

Organic program

Percentage of grounds managed organically:
0

If reporting an organic program, provide:

A brief description of the organic landscape management program:
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Integrated Pest Management (IPM) program 

Percentage of grounds managed in accordance with an IPM program:
100

If reporting an IPM program, provide:

A copy of the IPM plan or program:
A brief description of the IPM program:
The IPM plan is used to guide decisions for all plant and animal pests. Other elements in this section are further defined and guided by the Tree Care Plan and the landscape specifications (4) all of which are attached.

Optional Fields 

A brief description of the institution's approach to plant stewardship:
Preserve, protect and enhance are the primary goals for existing vegetation (see tree care plan). The use of natives or bio-climatically adapted plants is preferred and reviewed as part of MSU's plan review process. Use of these plants increases the diversity of the landscape and increases the educational plant palette platform. Invasives are not intentionally planted on campus and managed in accordance with our IPM philosophy.

A brief description of the institution's approach to hydrology and water use:
Sitting at the headwaters of the Missouri River drainage MSU is among the first users of water in this drainage. As such we must minimize our impacts both in terms of quantity used and quality of water introduced or returned to the watershed to preserve the ability of downstream users to do the same. MSU is a co-permittee on the City of Bozeman's MS4 permit and is required to report annually on storm water to the State Department of Environmental Quality. Water use reductions are fully covered in the Water use section of this submittal.

A brief description of the institution's approach to landscape materials management and waste minimization:
All green waste is composted or re-used on campus. Planting pots are re-used or returned to vendors for re-use. Wood chips are re-used as mulch or as a bulking agent for our composting operation.

A brief description of the institution's approach to energy-efficient landscape design:
Use of mulch to reduce water use and water pumping load.
Tree rings (same as above plus reduced weedeater use and subsequent damage)
Use of Native and/or bio-climatically appropriate plants (reduced resoiurce use over time)
Perennials versus annuals for flowers (less resource use)
Use if gravel or mulch buffer strips along building edges reduce weedeating and provide access for other building maintenance.
Mowing strips to reduce use of weedeaters
Irrigation controlled by Maxicom computer system
Irrigation design-separate shrub and turf zones and matched precipitation rates
Fescue or fescue blend turf versus bluegrass to reduce water and water pumping.
Mulch mowing-don’t pick up clippings

Edible Landscapes-We plant vegetables annually for all campus to harvest. Berry and tree fruit crops are harvested and used by our dining hall kitchens as well as the MSU community. A "Food Forest" planting has begun on the west side of the Animal Bioscience building.

MSU has developed native landscaping near Tietz hall to reduce watering, mowing and water runoff from a steep hillside. This is one example of efforts to reduce energy associated with mowing and water use. Others include detention areas and random areas across campus in planters, building edges or around art.

We have several areas (Mandeville buffer and south field house parking islands) that we mow only 2-3 times each year. Additionally we mow high (3” or so) to preserve water and moderate soil temps.

A brief description of other sustainable landscape management practices employed by the institution:
Snow removal operations are best described as risk management. MSU uses mechanical brooms whenever possible to remove snow. This reduces the build up of packed snow and ice typical with blade operations reducing the need for ice/pack mitigation. Primary mitigation of ice/pack uses 1/8 - 3/8" golf chips. Ice melt products are used only as necessary and typically only at building entrances.
No mow zones along water courses and detention areas improve water quality (chemicals and temperature). No fertilizer within 50' of water.
Recognized Bee Campus 2020 - pollinator friendly planting schemes and maintenance

Website URL where information about the institution’s sustainable landscape management program is available:
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Additional documentation to support the submission:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.