4.02 Plant Propagation
4.02 Plant Propagation
4.02 Plant Propagation
02 Methods of Plant
Propagation
2. Easy to do.
3. Economical.
Disadvantages of Sexual
Reproduction
1. Some plants, especially hybrids, do
not reproduce true to parents.
Simple Layering
Tip Layering
Serpentine Layering
Layering
Mound layering
Is mounding the soil on a branch
An example would be an azalea
Mound Layering
Division
Cutting apart rhizomes, tubers,
runners, stolons, or suckers to get new
plants
Division is used on plants that grow in
clumps
Examples of plants that can be divided
are hostas, daylilies, and irises
Also used on some grasses
Separation
Separating natural structures of a plant
without making a cut
Examples of plants:
Bulbs and corms
Grafting
Joining separate plant parts together so
that they form a union and grow
together to make one plant.
Tools needed are a knife, tape, and wax
Plants must be related to each other and
normally in the same genus or family
Grafting
Scion is the piece of plant at the top of
the graft
Rootstock is the piece of the plant at
the root or bottom of the graft
Examples of plants that can be grafted:
Maples and fruit trees
Sweetgum (fruitless sweetgum)
Pecan
Budding
A form of grafting when a bud is used.
Types:
T-budding,
Chip budding,
Patch Budding.
Budding
Successful T budding requires:
that the scion (top)material have fully-
formed, mature, dormant buds,
that the rootstock be in a condition of
active growth such that the "bark is
slipping".
This means that the vascular cambium is
actively growing, and the bark can be peeled
easily from the stock piece with little damage.
An example would be a rose
Budding Technique
2. 4.
Tissue Culture (or
Micropropagation)