Download presentation
1
Asexual Propagation
2
Two Types of Reproduction in Plants
Sexual Reproduction development of new plants by the process of meiosis and fertilization in the flower to produce a viable embryo in a seed Asexual Reproduction The production of new plants by any vegetative means not involving meiosis and the union of gametes
3
Advantages of Asexual (Vegetative) Reproduction
Maintain clone Uniform results Faster (cut production time) May be cheaper “Custom Design” a plant Can use it for experimental purposes Virus Indexing -Bud and graft to diagnose plant diseases
4
Disadvantages of Vegetative Reproduction
Diseases Propagate disease with plant (seeds occasionally spread disease also, cruciferous seeds are dropped in boiling water to stop disease) Certified plants – use virus indexing or tissue culture to get disease free plants Costly Sometimes more expensive vegetatively e.g. tomatoes – easy by cuttings, cheaper buy seed
5
Disadvantages of Vegetative reproduction
No Variation – no rearranging genetics, no new cultivars Couldn’t breed.. Disease resistant plants Plants that use less fertilizer Insect resistance No genetic variation Plants with higher yields
6
Types of Vegetative Reproduction
Apomixis Layering Cuttings Grafting Tissue Culture Specialized stems and structures
7
Types of Vegetative Reproduction
Apomixis Vegetative seed Bluegrass Citrus onions Gen nuclei causes mitosis of cell membrane Clone of female Ovary wall Chalaza Anitpodal cells Stigma surface Embryo sac Two polar nuclei Pollen tube Nucellus Egg Synergid cells Generative nuclei Integuments Tube nucleus Micropyle Funiculus
8
Types of Vegetative Reproduction
Layering
9
Types of Vegetative Reproduction
Layering
10
Air- Layering
11
Types of Vegetative Reproduction
Cuttings Stem cuttings Herbaceous Softwood Deciduous hardwood Narrow-leaved evergreen hardwood Semi hardwood Whole leaf Leaf sections Leaf bud cuttings Cane cuttings Tip cuttings Bulb leaf cuttings Root cuttings
20
Grafting Tools and Terms
Stock Scion Interstock Hand pruners Grafting knife Grafting wax Budding rubbers
21
Grafting “Rules” Close taxonomic relationship (family) 2 parts secure
Dif Genera only a few Species (Plums onto Peaches) Cultivars of species (almost always will work) Puzzles of incompatibility Pear on quince (sometimes) Quince on pear never 2 parts secure Protect from dessication Polarity
22
Types of Grafting Grafting – joining parts of plants together to unite and grow as one Budding – scion of one bud T-bud Patch bud Grafting – scion of two or more buds Side or stub graft Side bark graft Whip and tongue Cleft graft Approach graft Bridge graft Inarching Top-working (changing cultivars)
23
Patch budding
25
Banana graft Apple whip tongue grafting
26
Approach Graft – 2 methods
27
Whip and Tongue Graft
31
Types of Vegetative Propagation
Tissue Culture Specialized Stems and Structures Divisions Stolons Rhizomes Suckers Crowns Corms Bulbs Tubers Tuberous roots
32
Tissue Culture/Micropopagation
Tissue culture is a process where tiny plantlets are maintained on sterile artificial media containing nutrients. Totipotency describes the capacity of certain cells to regenerate a whole plant. Meristems are considered to be totipotent.
33
Tissue Culture/Micropopagation
Advantages Takes less room quicker Method Undifferentiated cells (explants) placed on agar with nutrients and hormones under sterile conditions Callus tissue generates cells in globs like jello dividing callus tissue is influenced with growth hormones Can get millions from a single plant
34
Stem structure
35
Other forms of Stems Chief characteristics are nodes and internodes
The following structures also have nodes and internodes and are therefore stems Rhizome Stolon Corms Bulb tuber
36
Node Internode
37
Corm
38
Cormels
39
Bulbs
40
Bulbils
41
Tuber
42
Sweet potato - Yam Stem or Root?
43
Root Types Fibrous Tap roots Adventitious roots Secondary roots
Aerial roots
44
Root Functions Absorb water and nutrients Anchorage Storage
autotrophic Anchorage Storage Propagation Photosynthesis Aerial roots help plant cling or climb
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.