Propagation Lecture
Propagation Lecture
Sexual or Asexual or
Seed Vegetative
Propagation Propagation
Plant characteristics are not genetically true to type to
that of their mother plant.
e.g. a Litchi plant may take 6-8 years to produce flowers but a
plant raised through vegetative propagation from another
mature plant flowers with in a season or between 3-4 years.
It is a process where a plant can reproduce asexually, with the
use of a vegetative part of the mother plant.
Layering
Grafting
Budding
It is a process by which a plant is produced
by taking a vegetative portion from the
plant and rooting it in a favorable medium
under optimum conditions.
d) Terminal cuttings
These are taken from below a node and the bottom leaves are removed.
Compound or Serpentine
Layering
Tip Layering
Air Layering
Short stemmed or stiff branched shrubs which do not bend easily are raised by this
method.
Such plants are encouraged to produce many shoots from the ground level by cutting
back the main stem the previous dormant season.
Then the soil or other medium is mounded around the base of newly developed
shoots.
e.g. Guava
This is similar to simple
layering where tip must
remain above the ground
whereas in tip layering, the
tip is buried in the ground.
In the process of grafting, the stock and scion are placed in close contact with
each other and held together firmly, until they unite to form a composite plant.
In this process, the parts of graft that are originally prepared and placed in close
contact to grow together.
The union is accomplished entirely
by cells that grow and develop after
the actual grafting operation has
been done.
Cleft
Grafting.
In whip and tongue grafting corresponding cuts through
rootstock and scion material are joined end to end and
then bound.
The interlocking ‘tongues’ add structural support to the
join as the cambium layers heal and fuse together, as well
giving a larger surface area of cambial contact.
Example- Apple
Veneer grafting, or inlay grafting, is a method used for
stocks larger than three centimeters in diameter.
The scion is recommended to be about as thick as a
pencil.
Clefts are made of the same size as the scion on the side of the
branch, not on top.
The scion end is shaped as a wedge, inserted, and wrapped with
tape to the scaffolding branches to give it more strength. E.g.
Mango
This is a form of grafting, the only difference is that
instead of grafting a scion twig only a single bud is
inserted in the stock.
Patch Budding
Chip Budding
T budding or shield budding is a special
grafting technique.
In T- budding the scion piece is reduced to a single bud.
Dahlia Tubers
Gerbera Cuttings or suckers
Seasonal or annual flowers Seeds
A. Tongue Grafting
B. Patch Budding
C. Veneer
C. T- Budding
Grafting
D. Cleft Grafting
A. B.
Stolon Grafting
C.
C. D.
Corms
Corms Sucker
A. Sucker
A. Sucker
B. Stolon
C. Bulbil
D. Cormel
A. Compound Layering
B. Trench Layering
C.Air
C. AirLayering
Layering
D. Continuous Layering
C. Seed