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SEXUAL Vs. ASEXUAL PROPAGATION
SEXUAL OR SEED PROPAGATION
Advantages:
1) produces large numbers in a short period of time
2) can handle large numbers easily
3) produces hybrids
Disadvantages:
1) some plants produce no viable seeds
2) some seeds are very difficult or slow to germinate
3) causes genetic variability (due to production of hybrids)
ASEXUAL OR VEGETATIVE PROPAGATION
totipotency - the concept that every cell in a plant has the inherent genetic ability to
reproduce the entire plant.
Advantages:
1) All off-spring are true-to-type (identical to the parent) and produce a clone .
clone - a group of plants, cultivar or variety derived from the same parent plant by asexual
(vegetative) propagation.
2) for plants that are hard or impossible to propagate from seeds
3) decrease time to flowering (esp. grafting & budding); by-passes juvenile phase
Disadvantages:
1) can only propagate a few from each parent (except tissue culture).
2) requires a lot of labor
Tissue Culture
An asexual propagation technique where small pieces of excised tissue or individual cells are placed in sterile in vitro culture
containing all the nutrients, carbohydrates and hormones needed for growth. The tissue grows rapidly and can be induced to
produce large numbers of new plants. Hormones are used to cause the tissue to grow into callus masses, roots or shoots.
Sometimes called micropropagation.
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SEXUAL (SEED) PROPAGATION
TERMINOLOGY
pollination - deposition of pollen on the stigma of the pistil.
ploidy - the number of sets of chromosomes present in the nucleus of the cell.
haploid = 1N = 1 of each chromosome
diploid = 2N = 2 of each chromosome
triploid= 3N = 3 of each chromosome
tetraploid = 4N = 4 of each chromosome
Normally, the regular cells of the plant (called vegetative cells) are 2N, and the reproductive cells (called the
gametes) are 1N.
gamete - a haploid (1N) reproductive cell.
- the male gamete is the sperm cell with its 1N nucleus
- the female gamete is the egg cell with its 1N nucleus.
fertilization - the union of one male gamete (1N sperm nucleus) and one female gamete (1N egg
nucleus) to produce a zygote (2N).
double fertilization - union of one male gamete (1N) with one female gamete (1N) to produce a
zygote (2N), plus the union of one male gamete (1N) with two polar nuclei (1N
each) to produce an endosperm (3N); occurs in higher plants only (angiosperms).
apomixis - development of an embryo without fertilization; hence, it is not true sexual propagation
even though it produces a seed.
parthenocarpy - development of fruit without seeds.
vivipary - germination of seeds inside the fruit while still attached to the parent plant.
STAGES OF SEED GERMINATION
1st Stage
a) imbibition - initial absorption of water to hydrate seed
b) activation of metabolism - increased respiration and protein synthesis
2nd Stage
a) digestion of stored food- for example, starch to sugars in cotyledon or endosperm
b) translocation to embryo- sugars move to embryo for growth
3rd Stage
a) cell division and growth - development of seedling
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SEXUAL LIFE CYCLE OF HIGHER PLANTS
(Angiosperms: Monocots and Dicots - the flowering plants)
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SEED DORMANCY
Caused By Type Dormancy How Overcome?
1) Dry Seeds:
quiescence sow in moist environment
dehydration of seed
2) Seed Coat Dormancy or
Hardseededness: scarification - physical or chemical
quiescence
hard seed coat impermeable abrasion of seed coat.
to water and gases
3) Embryo Rest: rest
low growth promoters and/or (physiological stratification - cold (35-40 oF),
high growth inhibitors dormancy) moist storage for 4-12 weeks.
in embryo
4) Double Dormancy:
both quiescence
hard seed coat plus embryo scarification then stratification
and rest
rest
I) if fleshy, remove fleshy pericarp
5) Chemical Inhibitors:
correlated (fruit wall) or testa (seed coat).
inhibitors in pericarp (fruit
inhibition 2) if pericarp or testa is dry, leach
wall) or testa (seed coat)
in running watery.
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1) after ripening - store for 4-6
weeks under ambient conditions.
6) Immature Embryo:
developmental 2) warm stratification - warm
underdeveloped or
dormancy moist storage.
rudimentary embryo
3) embryo culture - excise
embryo and put in tissue culture.
I) expose to any white light
7) Light Requirement secondary
2) expose to red light
phytochrome in Pr form dormancy
3) sow shallow or on surface
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CUTTINGS
Cutting - a plant part that when removed from the parent plant and placed under the proper
environmental conditions forms adventitious roots and/or shoots.
HOW TO MINIMIZE WATER LOSS OF CUTTINGS?
1) Place cuttings in cool, humid area - for leafless cuttings
2) Spray cuttings with antitranspirants.
antitranspirants - chemicals that decrease transpiration by forming a film on the leaf surface or
by physiologically closing stomata.
3) Place cuttings in a humidity chamber - enclosed chamber with very high humidity.
4) Place cuttings under an intermittent mist system.
Intermittent Mist System
A propagation system that periodically (every 5 to 30 minutes) sprays a fine mist of water on the cuttings to keep the foliage
moist and minimize water loss.
Effective due to:
a) high relative humidity
b) cooler temperature
c) allows use of higher light intensity
d) increases endogenous root promoting substances
e) may decrease disease
Disadvantage:
leaching - the loss of nutrients and other compounds from inside leaves and stems.
During intermittent mist propagation up to half of some of the nutrients in the leaf can be leached out. This causes the
cuttings to be nutrient deficient. The problem can be corrected with nutrient mist.
nutrient mist - addition of dilute fertilizers to the mist; replaces nutrients lost to leaching. Use 2-6 oz. of a 20-20-20
or equivalent soluble fertilizer per 100 gallons of water.
HORMONES USED ON CUTTINGS
1) auxin - stimulates adventitious root formation on stem cuttings.
- IBA (most commonly used), NAA (frequently used), 2, 4-D (less used).
2) cytokinin - stimulates adventitious shoot formation on leaf or root cuttings.
- kinetin (commonly used), benzyladenine (BA) (commonly used), zeatin (seldom used),
pyranylbenzyladenine(PBA) ( used in research).
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TYPES OF CUTTINGS
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LEAF CUTTINGS - must form both adventitious shoots and
roots (except leaf bud).
a) leaf bud
b) leaf petiole
c) leaf blade
d) leaf section
STEM CUTTINGS - must form adventitious roots
a) hardwood
b) semi-hardwood
c) soft or greenwood hardwood
semi-hardwood,
d) herbaceous softwood
or herbaceous
e) cane
leafless stem
f) rhizome
underground stem cane rhizome
g) tuber
underground storage stem
tuber
ROOT CUTTINGS
must form adventitious shoots
root section
tuberous root
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CHIMERA
(ki mer' a)
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Chimera - a plant or plant part composed of genetically different layers.
The most common example is a "variegated" plant where different regions or layers of the leaf are yellow or white due to no
chlorophyll development, i.e. these are chlorophyll mutants.
GROWING POINT OR APEX - can be subdivided into 3 different layers called L-I, L-II and L-III.
Layer Gives rise to:
L-I epidermis of all organs;
monocot leaves - L-I contributes to the outermost region of the leaf mesophyll giving
rise to a strip along the leaf margin.
dicot leaves - L-I usually gives rise to only the colorless epidermis, thus cannot be seen;
sometimes L-I gives rise to small islands of tissue along the margin.
L-II stem and roots: outer and inner cortex and some of vascular cylinder
leaves: mesophyll in outer region of leaf
L-III stem and roots: inner cortex, vascular cylinder and pith
leaves: mesophyll in central region of leaf
LOCATION OF LAYERS IN A TYPICAL DICOT
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NEVER PROPAGATE CHIMERAS BY LEAF CUTTINGS - WHY?
(for the same reasons - never use root cuttings)
(Modified from: R.A.E. Tilney-Bassett. 1986. Plant Chimeras. Edward Arnold Ltd., Baltimore, MD)
VARIEGATED LEAF PATTERNS OF CHIMERAS
The leaves below demonstrate two types of variegated Elaeagnus. The cultivar on the left is a L-II chimera (i.e. GWG), and the
cultivar on the right is a L-III chimera (i.e. GGW). These are chimeras where the yellow or albino regions cannot make chlorophyll.
A cross-section of the leaf shows the regions of albino cells in the mesophyll. The different shades of green and yellow are
determined by the depth of the cell layers..
ADVENTITIOUS SHOOT FORMATION ON LEAF CUTTINGS OF CHIMERAS
If you take leaf cuttings from variegated plants, such as these variegated Peperomia (GWG), the plantlets that form are never true-
to-type to the parent variegation. The reason is simple. The adventitious shoots that form will have the properties of the region of
the leaf from which they regenerate. The same would happen with a root cutting. For this reason, chimeras are never propagated
true-to-type by cutting types or methods that require adventitious shoot formation.
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LAYERING
Layering - a propagation technique where roots are formed prior to the stem being removed
from the parent plant.
PRINCIPLE OF LAYERING
In layering, one must wound the stem such that phloem, but not xylem, translocation is disrupted. The internal anatomy of dicot,
gymnosperm and monocot stems dictates the "ideal" type cut that is made to get maximum disruption of translocation in the
phloem, while causing minimum disruption of translocation in the xylem. If done properly, roots form on the stem at the wounded
site. The stem is then cut-off with the attached roots.
ANATOMICAL BASIS FOR THE TYPE CUTS USED IN LAYERING
Woody Dicots and Gymnosperms
A ring of bark is removed from around the stem. The phloem and cambium are attached to the inside of the bark, so when the bark
is removed the phloem is also removed. This leaves the central cylinder of xylem and upward water flow unaffected.
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Monocots
Monocots have scattered vascular bundles, therefore, it is not possible to cut the phloem and not the xylem. As a compromise, a
slit is cut about 1/3 way into the stem. This cuts enough of the vascular bundles to disrupt sufficient phloem translocation while still
allowing sufficient water flow in the xylem.
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TYPES OF LAYERING
air layer simple layer
tip layer serpentine layer
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trench layer mound or stool layer
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GRAFTING AND BUDDING
Grafting - the joining of separate plant parts together, such that they form a union and grow
as one plant.
scion or cion - the upper part of the graft that becomes the shoot system of the
new plant.
stock, rootstock or understock - the lower part of the graft that becomes the
root system of the new plant.
Budding - a type of grafting where the scion is just a bud piece or small chip of wood with
a bud attached.
REASONS FOR GRAFTING OR BUDDING
1) Plants cannot be propagated by other means, ex. plants in adult phase
2) Decrease time to flowering and fruiting, especially fruit and nut trees
3) Obtain desirable characteristics of rootstock, such as:
a) disease resistance
b) adapted to soils or climate in various regions
c) dwarfing
4) Change variety, topwork mature trees
5) Special forms, usually for ornamental purposes, ex. tree roses
6) Repair damage (inarching, brace graft, bridge graft)
7) Virus indexing, used for diagnosing virus diseases
STAGES OF GRAFT AND BUD UNION FORMATION
Prerequisite- must match cambium of stock with cambium of scion
1) Callus formation by both stock and scion
2) Intermingling of callus from stock and scion
3) New cambium forms in callus between stock and scion
4) New secondary xylem and phloem from new cambium to connect stock and scion
FACTORS AFFECTING SUCCESS OF GRAFTING AND BUDDING
1) Plant type - can only graft dicots and gymnosperms; not monocots (lack a cambium)
2) Plant Relationship - within species is most successful
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3) Incompatibility - sometimes graft or bud is rejected, even if within species
4) Season and growth state - best when cambium is active, but without leaf growth
5) Environment - must supply proper temperature, humidity, etc.
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TYPES OF GRAFTING
TYPES USED TO REPAIR DAMAGE
inarching bridge graft brace graft
(to replace damaged root system) (to repair damaged trunk) (to support weak branches)
TYPES USED WHEN SCION AND STOCK ARE APPROXIMATELY EQUAL IN SIZE
whip or tongue graft
(click image for animated version) splice graft saddle graft
TYPES USED WHEN SCION IS SMALLER THAN STOCK
wedge, notch or
side graft cleft graft saw-kerf graft
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bark or bark inlay graft approach graft topworking
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TYPES OF BUDDING
TYPES USED WHEN BARK IS SLIPPING
(click on image to view animated version)
T-bud inverted T- bud I-bud
patch bud ring bud flute bud
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TYPE USED WHEN BARK IS NOT SLIPPING
(click on image to view animated version)
chip bud
Go to: Table of Contents | Introduction | Anatomy | Physiology | Hormones | Temperature |
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