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Vegetative Propagation

Vegetative Propagation A method of plant propagation( asexual) not through pollination or seeds or spores but by way of separating new plant individuals that emerge from vegetative parts, such as specialized stems, leaves and roots and allow them to take root and grow. . 2 Types.

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Vegetative Propagation

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  1. Vegetative Propagation A method of plant propagation( asexual) not through pollination or seeds or spores but by way of separating new plant individuals that emerge from vegetative parts, such as specialized stems, leaves and roots and allow them to take root and grow.

  2. 2 Types ARTIFICIAL VS NATURAL Natural is when nature does it( generally seen in perennial plants), and artificial is with a little help from man.

  3. Natural Propagation includes: Corms: ( each year more and more corms grow around the original…must be separated or they will choke) gladiolas and crocus Tubers: ( come from underground stems) potatoes Stolons: ( horizontally above ground stems with tiny leaves from which new plants grow) strawberries are an example Scaly bulbs: ( similar to corms but much larger) onions, garlic, daffodils Tip layer: arching shoots that ultimately touch-down onto the soil ex. Blackberries Root sprouts( suckers): The roots of most plants produce cytokinins. As these accumulate in the roots, the cytokinins induce shoot formation. Near the base of the shrub, a new shoot will begin to grow. Ex. Red raspberries and most bushes

  4. Artificial Propagation Leaf cuttings: clone plants by taking a piece and putting it in water or moist soil Stem cuttings: faster than leaf cutting. Place stem piece in water and soon it’s sprout and you plant it. Tissue Culture: designed to make thousands from one small clipping. Clipping is placed into a tissue culture containing nutrients and water. Sprouts quickly. Grafting/ Budding: both are means of asexual propagation that join different plant parts as one. There are many types and the type depends on the reason for grafting. Reasons may be: develop a plant with inadequate root systems stronger stem of one grafted to another for better fruit or flower production **** IN THE NAME OF SCIENCE… NEW AND BETTER FRUITS, VEGGIES AND FLOWERS

  5. Table 18.2 Modes of Vegetative reproduction with examples Mode of Reproduction Specialised plant Examples part (A) Natural Methods (a) Roots :Asparagus, Sweet potato (b) Stem :(a) Runner Lawn grass,Sucker Mint, Onion, (c) Bulb: Onion (d) Tuber: Potato, Canna (e) Rhizome :Ginger (c) Leave Buds: Bryophyllum (d) Special Parts: Bulbil Oxalis,Pineapple Onion (B) Artificial Methods (a) Cutting: Rose, Money Plant (b) Layering :Jasmine, (c) Grafting :Grape vine, apple trees (d) Tissue Culture: Citrus, Mango, Orchids, Chrysanthemum, Asparagus.

  6. Cultivated Plants A number of commonly cultivated plants are usually propagated by vegetative means rather than by seeds. This is a listing of such plants: African violets — leaf cuttings Apple — grafting Avocado — grafting Banana — sucker removal blackberries (Rubusoccidentalis) — stem cuttings Peach — grafting Citrus (lemon, orange, grapefruit, Tangerine) — grafting Date — sucker removal Fig — stem cuttings Grapes — stem cuttings, grafting Hops — stem cuttings Manioc (cassava) — stem cuttings Maple — stem cuttings, grafting Nut crops (walnut, pecan) — grafting Pineapple — stem cuttings Pear — grafting Plum — stem cuttings Poplar — stem cuttings Potato — stem (tuber) cuttings Garden strawberry — runners (stolons) Sugar cane — stem cuttings Tea — stem cuttings Vanilla — stem cuttings Verbena — stem cuttings Willow — stem cuttings

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