Cloning plants: Easier than it seems

Love to garden? Me too! Garden talk and photos goes here: Flower gardens, vegetable gardens, organic gardening, natural pest control, houseplants, more.
Post Reply
Ravencry
Posts: 1698
Joined: Sun Jun 27, 2010 3:30 pm
Gender: Female
Location: North Hollywood, Ca

Cloning plants: Easier than it seems

Post by Ravencry »

To the average consumer, plant propagation might simply mean growing a new plant from a seed. Experienced gardeners and farmers, however, know that they are numerous ways to propagate, both sexual and asexual. The asexual methods usually create an exact genetic duplicate, or clone of the parent plant. This is usually highly desirable when a gardener finds a plant with superior genetic traits. Plant cloning is almost as old as agriculture itself, and some species of trees originated as plants that were cloned on a mass scale. For example, all Bartlett pear trees have their ancestors in a tree that was first cloned in 1770. Here are the most common methods gardeners use for cloning plants.

Layering - Layering is a method of cloning plants where roots are encouraged to actually form on the stem before it is removed from the parent plant. Some plants actually use this technique to propagate themselves in nature. In simple layering, the gardener simply bends a low growing stem into the medium, keeping it in place with a stake if necessary. The stem should form roots and start growing as a new plant. In serpentine layering, a very long stem is buried into the medium at intervals. The buried sections will form roots and create several new plants.

Grafting - Grafting is a method of plant cloning where one plant fuses with another plant. In agriculture, it is usually done with trees. In this technique, the bottom section with the plant roots is referred to as the stock, and the plant that is used for the stems and leaves is called the scion. Many farmers do this when they want to increase the odds of a plant's survival by grafting its top section to another plant with stronger roots. It is also sometimes done to save a tree that may have suffered a damaged trunk or roots.

Cutting - Cutting is the most commonly used technique for cloning plants in hydroponics. The gardener simply cuts off a part of the plant, usually a stem or leaf, and plants it into the growing medium. Since this technique requires one to actually detach a part of the plant from the root, and therefore cut off its primary source of moisture, it is imperative to keep a well humidified grow room while cloning plants through cutting. Many gardeners even choose to operate "mist sprays" on their planted cut stems during the one or two weeks that it takes for them to form roots.

Micropropagation - Micropropigation is a very new, very advanced, and very expensive form of plant cloning. In this technique, lab technicians actually make clones of plants using the actual plant tissue. Since this has to be performed in a sterile laboratory environment, and is therefore very costly, it is only performed on plants that are very difficult to propagate asexually. Many believe that Micropropagation may be a way to the future of propagation, as it may have ability to create disease-free plants, as well as plants with other desirable traits, such as those that bigger yields or tastier vegetables.

I personally cloned a spearmint plant, and I haven't even had it for a week and it already has taken root. Yay me!
Lost_Demise
Banned Member
Posts: 295
Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 4:47 am

Re: Cloning plants: Easier than it seems

Post by Lost_Demise »

That sounds very interesting. I may want to clone my old apple tree, cutting sounds like the safest way to do it without harming it. It's so old that I really wouldn't want to chance it's health.
User avatar
Evanthe
Posts: 61
Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2010 6:59 am
Gender: Female

Re: Cloning plants: Easier than it seems

Post by Evanthe »

We use root tone for getting cuttings to start. Just about anything will grow with it. It's a rooting hormone powder and comes in a little bottle. I've found it helpful to start some things in sand as the growing medium, too. This worked well from shrubs.Once the roots are established, just replant into a regular medium.
Evanthe
-------------------------------------------------------------------
"You don't have a soul. You are a soul. You have a body."
-C.S Lewis
Post Reply

Return to “Gardening”