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Asexual propagation

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No direct sun. Shoots without flowers or flower buds. Node near base of cutting. Rooting hormones ... will produce branches and bear fruit and become a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Asexual propagation


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Asexual propagation
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Why use asexual propagation?
  • Uniformity
  • Propagate non-seed producing plants
  • Avoid seedborne diseases
  • To create insect or disease resistant plants
  • To incorporate environmental tolerances
  • To reproduce and retain the genetic traits of a
    hybrid
  • Control size and form of a plant
  • Can be faster and easier, cheaper

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Disadvantages of asexual propagation
  • Uniformity
  • Short storage time
  • Bulky
  • Systemic infections can be spread

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Types of asexual propagation
  • Specialized parts
  • Cuttings
  • Layering
  • Grafting
  • Tissue culture

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Specialized plant parts
  • Offshoots
  • Separation
  • Division

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Division
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Division - rhizomes
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Division of rhizomes
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Division
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Division
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Division fleshy roots
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Division tuberous roots
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Separation
  • Bulbs
  • Corms

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Separation bulbs
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Separation bulbs
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Separation - bulbs
  • Amaryllis (a tunicate bulb)

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Scooping bulbs
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Separation scaly bulbs
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Separation - corms
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Cuttings
  • Herbaceous
  • Woody plants
  • Softwood
  • Semi-hardwood (ripe)
  • Hardwood

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Cuttings
  • Herbaceous
  • Stem
  • Stem tip
  • Leaf bud
  • Leaf

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Leaf cuttings
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Whole leaf cuttings
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Leaf cuttings
Keep moist at all times
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Leaf cuttings
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Cuttings from variegated plants
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Roots tend to develop at nodes
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Cuttings
  • Softwood late spring, new growth
  • Semi-hardwood (ripe) summer, recent growth
  • Hardwood late fall (dormant), 1 yr. growth

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Semi-hardwood (ripe) cuttings
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Semi-ripe Leaf-bud cuttings
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Cutting principles
  • Age of material
  • Correct seasonal timing
  • Sterile rooting medium, sanitation
  • High humidity
  • No direct sun
  • Shoots without flowers or flower buds
  • Node near base of cutting
  • Rooting hormones
  • Basal wounding of woody cuttings
  • Remove leaves in contact with rooting medium

46
Bottom heat aids in rooting
47
Cutting resources
  • Fine Gardening Magazine online
  • University Ag Extension sites
  • NCSU
  • Purdue
  • Univ. of Missouri

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Campbell University
  • Mission statement

49
God and plant propagation
  • " 'This is what the Sovereign LORD says I myself
    will take a shoot from the very top of a cedar
    and plant it I will break off a tender sprig
    from its topmost shoots and plant it on a high
    and lofty mountain. 23 On the mountain heights of
    Israel I will plant it it will produce branches
    and bear fruit and become a splendid cedar.
    (Ezekiel 17)

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Runners
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Layering
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Types of layering
  • Simple layering
  • Tip layering
  • Compound layering
  • Mound layering
  • Trench layering
  • Air layering

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Tip layering
  • Limited to brambles

54
Simple layering
  • Layer in Spring with 1 yr. old wood rooted by
    fall--remove

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Rooting layers
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Compound (serpentine) layering
  • Use with flexible vines

57
Mound layering
  • Used for rootstock production in nursery trees

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Trench layering
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Air layering
  • Developed by Chinese

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Air layering
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Grafting
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Why graft?
  • Incorporate disease, insect resistance (link)
  • Incorporate temperature tolerance
  • Quickly increase of a desirable type
  • Change cultivar of fruit in an orchard
  • Control form (dwarfing, weeping, tree mums
    roses)
  • Repair bark damage

64
Grafting principles
  • Contact between vascular cambium of scion and
    rootstock

65
Grafting principles
  • Taxonomic compatibility
  • Timing of graft (dormant scion)
  • Waterproof graft junction
  • Rootstock diameter gt scion diameter

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Whip or Tongue grafting
  • Most common grafting method

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Grafting over
  • Adding a cultivar to an established fruit tree
  • Replace the existing cultivar
  • Add a new pollinator
  • Try a new cultivar
  • Top-working
  • Frame-working

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Bark grafting (Rind graft, p. 437)
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Cleft grafting
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Double working (p. 440)
  • Using an interstock to graft an incompatible
    scion to a rootstock
  • Interstock is compatible with both scion and
    rootstock

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Side grafting
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Approach grafting
  • Use when detached scion not possible

73
Flat grafting cacti
74
Budding
  • Scion is a bud
  • Used to propagate fruit trees, roses

75
T-budding
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Chip budding
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Patch budding
78
Bridge grafting to repair damage
79
Bridge graft to strengthen a narrow crotch angle
80
Inarching to repair damage
81
Grafting information online
  • UGA Extension Service
  • NCSU Home propagation
  • Texas A M

82
Micropropagation
  • Utilizes cell and tissue culture
  • Home tissue culture
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