{"title":"Rooting and acclimatization of in vitro propagated microshoots of the Ericaceae","authors":"A. Erst, A. Gorbunov, A. Karakulov","doi":"10.37855/jah.2018.v20i03.31","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The effective methods of rooting and acclimatization in the sphagnum moss of in vitro propagated microshoots of commercially promising plants: Rhododendron ledebourii, R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ and Vaccinium uliginosum cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’ were developed for the first time. Two methods were studied: 1) rooting in vitro and acclimatization in the substrate and 2) rooting and acclimatization ex vitro in the substrate. Taking into account two factors (rooting of microshoots only in vitro conditions and only from already rooted in vitro regenerants), we have achieved 100 % of rooting of bog blueberry cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’ and 73 % of plants adapted to ex vitro conditions. The method of ex vitro rooting in the substrate has been proved as effective for R. ledebourii, rooting of it’s shoots reached 80-90 % with 87 % viable plants. R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ showed the greatest plasticity among the studied species and cultivars on ability to rooting of microshoots. All tested methods gave up to 90-100 % rooted and adapted plants of this cultivar. It was revealed that in vitro rooting microshoots, followed by acclimatization in the substrate was optimal for V. uliginosum cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’; for R. ledebourii – the rooting and acclimatization in the substrate; and for R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ both methods were effective. From a commercial point of view, the proposed methods decrease the costs of plant production significantly through a reduction in the time and labour needed to obtain well-rooted and acclimatized Ericaceae microplants. Therefore, it could make the micropropagation of commercially promising Ericacea plants in the nursery industry both possible and profitable.","PeriodicalId":39205,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Applied Horticulture","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Applied Horticulture","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.37855/jah.2018.v20i03.31","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
The effective methods of rooting and acclimatization in the sphagnum moss of in vitro propagated microshoots of commercially promising plants: Rhododendron ledebourii, R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ and Vaccinium uliginosum cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’ were developed for the first time. Two methods were studied: 1) rooting in vitro and acclimatization in the substrate and 2) rooting and acclimatization ex vitro in the substrate. Taking into account two factors (rooting of microshoots only in vitro conditions and only from already rooted in vitro regenerants), we have achieved 100 % of rooting of bog blueberry cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’ and 73 % of plants adapted to ex vitro conditions. The method of ex vitro rooting in the substrate has been proved as effective for R. ledebourii, rooting of it’s shoots reached 80-90 % with 87 % viable plants. R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ showed the greatest plasticity among the studied species and cultivars on ability to rooting of microshoots. All tested methods gave up to 90-100 % rooted and adapted plants of this cultivar. It was revealed that in vitro rooting microshoots, followed by acclimatization in the substrate was optimal for V. uliginosum cv. ‘Golubaya rossyp’; for R. ledebourii – the rooting and acclimatization in the substrate; and for R. hybridum cv. ‘Cunningham’s White’ both methods were effective. From a commercial point of view, the proposed methods decrease the costs of plant production significantly through a reduction in the time and labour needed to obtain well-rooted and acclimatized Ericaceae microplants. Therefore, it could make the micropropagation of commercially promising Ericacea plants in the nursery industry both possible and profitable.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Horticulture (JAH) is an official publication of the Society for the Advancement of Horticulture, founded in 1999. JAH is a triannual publication, publishes papers of original work (or results), & rapid communications and reviews on all aspects of Horticultural Science which can contribute to fundamental and applied research on horticultural plants and their related products. The essential contents of manuscripts must not have been published in other refereed publications. Submission of a manuscript to the Journal implies no concurrent submission elsewhere.