Title: Principles%20of%20Grafting%20and%20Budding
1Principles of Grafting and Budding
2Grafting Budding Terms
Graft Two living plants connected and growing
as one
Scion Dormant shoot, upper portion of graft
Stock Lower portion of graft, root system
3Grafting Budding Terms
Bud Similar to graft, but scion is reduced to a
single bud
4Grafting Budding Terms
Interstock A middle or intermediate stem piece
located between scion stock
5Grafting Budding Terms
Vascular Cambium Meristematic tissue between
xylem phloem
6Grafting and Budding
- Perpetuate clones
- Rootstock effects
- Changing cultivars
- Rapid maturity
- Shortens juvenility
- Used for breeding programs
- Special growth forms
- Damage repair
- Studying viruses
7Seedling Rootstocks
- Simple
- Cheap
- Disease free
- Better root systems
- Genetic variation
8Clonal Rootstocks
- Source
- Stool beds
- Cuttings
- Tissue Culture
- Characteristics
- Uniformity
- Disease Resistance
- Growth Habit
- Flowering Habit
- Scion rooting
- Disease potential
9Rootstock benefits
- Disease resistance
- Soil tolerance
- Size control
- Fruit quality
Interstock benefits
- Overcome incompatibility
- Add additional attributes
- Dwarfing
10Topworking
- Change cultivars
- Add pollinators
11Topworking
- Multiple varieties on one tree
12Formation of graft union
- Line up vascular cambium
- Wound healing response
- Necrotic plate
- Callus bridge formation
- Cambium formation
- Vascular tissue formation
131. Close Vascular Contact
- 55-90F
- Active cambium
- High humidity
- Pathogen free
- Mechanical support
- Cambium matching
142. Formation of Necrotic plate
- Cells killed when
- cut is made
153. Callus Bridge Formation
- Production Interlocking of parenchyma
- Comes from phloem and immature xylem
- Stock produces most callus
164. New Cambium Formation
- Adjacent callus differentiates to form cambium
- Cambium forms across bridge of callus tissue
175. New Vascular Tissue (XP) From New Cambium
- Vascular system must be in place before bud break
18GRAFT FORMATION
19BUD FORMATION
20Factors of graft healing
- Incompatibility
- Species or variety (cultivar)
- Temperature
- Moisture
- Oxygen
- Growth status (active vs. dormant)
- Technique or type of graft
- Disease situation
21Polarity in grafting
- Distal and Proximal ends
- Reversed polarity works only for a limited time
with grafts - Nurse-root grafting
- Buds can be reversed
- Can cause a wide crotch angle as it grows - strong
22Limits of grafting
- Generally limited to dicots gymnosperms
- More closely related the better
- Permanent grafts in monocots are not successful
- Likely has a lot to do with cambium and vascular
tissue production - Common between same species
- Apple on apple
- Harder between different Genera in same family
- Tomato on potato (Solanaceae family, or
Nightshade) - Rare between families
23Symptoms of Incompatibility
- High failure rate
- Yellow foliage, early defoliation
- Premature death of scion
- Differences in growth rate
- Not always a sign of incompatibility
- Can be differences in genetic potential for
growth rate - Overgrowths
- Breaks at graft union
24Types of Incompatibility
- Localized
- At site of graft contact
- Translocated
- Substances moved from the scion to rootstock or
vice-versa - Virus present
25Incompatibility
- Cause Genetic
- Mechanism (example theories)
- Chemicals found in one partner may be toxic to
the other (Cyanogenic glucoside) - Lignification of cell walls may be inhibited
26Effects of Rootstocks on the Scion
- Size and growth habit
- Fruiting
- Size, quality, and maturity of fruit
- Winter hardiness
- Disease resistance
- Timing of fruit maturity
Effects of Scion on the Rootstock
27Effects of Interstock on Stock Scion
- Reduces stock and scion size
- Direct effect, not indirect
Mechanisms of effects (theory)
- Translocation (stem)
- Absorbing ability (root system)
- Interaction of all parts
28Factors influencing growth of grafted plants
- Nutrition
- Translocation
- Endogenous growth factors