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The Art and Science of Grafting
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Adam R. Wheeler Graduate Assistant University of Vermont
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So What is Grafting? - Grafting is the ART of connecting two pieces of living plant tissue so that they will unite, grow and develop as one plant
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Grafting Terminology Scion - short piece of detached shoot containing at least one dormant bud. The upper portion of the graft producing stems and branches Rootstock (understock or stock) - lower portion of the graft. Produces the root system of the plant.
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Vascular cambium - an area of actively growing tissue located between the bark (phloem) and wood (xylem). The cambium of scion must be in close contact with cambium of rootstock.
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Callus - mass of parenchyma cells that develop from wounded plant tissues.
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The History of Grafting
- First documented by the Chinese as early as 5000 B.C. when Feng Li, a Chinese diplomat, began grafting peaches, almonds, persimmons, pears and apples as a commercial venture.
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- Aristotle (384 -322 B. C. ) and Theophrastus (371-287 B. C
- Aristotle ( B.C.) and Theophrastus ( B.C.) both wrote about grafting.
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- During the Roman Empire the Romans were famous for their grafted olive trees
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- The Renaissance period (1350-1600 AD) saw renewed interest in grafting
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In the 16-17th century grafting was widely used in England
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- In the early 1800’s grafting became common place in the United States.
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- Today grafting is used by many major growers to produce hundreds of different types of agricultural and ornamental plants.
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So Tell Me How It Works!
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What’s The Point Then?
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1) To Perpetuate clones - Many plants (beech, eucalyptus, fir, oak and
apple) root very poorly from cuttings. - Consequently, clones of these species are often maintained by grafting.
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- Japanese maples often form poor root systems when grown from cuttings and therefore must be grafted
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2) To Take Advantage of Rootstock Disease and Pest Tolerance.
Some rootstocks can tolerate unfavorable soil pressure from disease, insects and nematodes better than the scion’s root system.
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- Wine grapes are grafted onto native muscadine grapes to prevent problems from nematodes and phylloxera = yellow aphid.
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3) To Take Advantage of Rootstocks tolerance of poor growing conditions.
- Some rootstocks are able to withstand poor quality soils (compaction, poor drainage, dry, high salt levels) better than the scion’s root system.
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4) Some Rootstocks Can Speed the Growth
of the Scion Into Early Maturity.
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5) Some Rootstocks can increase plant growth rate and reduce nursery production time.
- Some shade trees (like Acer platanoides ‘Super Form’) can grow more quickly if grafted than if grown as a rooted cutting or even a seedling!
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6) Grafting Can Be Used to Obtain Special Growth Forms
- With ornamentals, it is common to use an upright growing rootstock and a “weeping” or “dwarf” scion
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- With fruit trees it is common to use a dwarfing rootstock to create a smaller sized plant
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7) Grafting Can be used to Repair damaged trees
Trees are often damaged from winter injury, rodents, machinery, or disease. Grafters can use a bridge graft or a technique known as inarching to repair the damage.
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8) Grafting can be used to change cultivars on established plants (topworking)
This method is used to: Change unproductive cultivars or those no longer in demand Fix poor growth habit Change cultivars that are susceptible to insects of disease
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What’s The Plan For Today?
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Budding - a specialty form of grafting performed in late summer
Budding - a specialty form of grafting performed in late summer. The scion is small and typically only consists of a single bud.
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Two Types of Budding
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Working with T-budding
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The End
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