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Sexual & Asexual Reproduction. Vegetative Parts in Asexual Reproduction: Presentation 3 of 3. Asexual Reproduction. Asexual or vegetative reproduction involves the production of new plants by means of vegetative parts of an existing plant.
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Sexual & Asexual Reproduction Vegetative Parts in Asexual Reproduction: Presentation 3 of 3
Asexual Reproduction • Asexual or vegetative reproduction involves the production of new plants by means of vegetative parts of an existing plant.
The vegetative parts of many plants have the ability to produce new roots and/or shoots to form a new plant.
Asexual reproduction is often advantageous over sexual reproduction because: • new plants reach maturity in less time; • disease-free plants can be produced in controlled environmental conditions;
reproduction is possible for plants that do not develop reproductive parts or viable seeds; • plant selection for desired characteristics is more reliable; and • new plants are genetically identical to the parent plant.
Vegetative plant parts used in asexual reproduction include: • Leaves • Stems • Buds • Roots
Methods of vegetative plant reproduction include: • Cuttings • Layering • Separation • Division • Grafting • Budding • Tissue Culture
Cuttings • Propagation by cuttings is the most widely used method of vegetative or asexual reproduction.
Cuttings Cont’d • A cutting is any part severed from the parent plant, including: • stem cuttings, • root cuttings, and • leaf cuttings.
Layering • Layering involves forcing a vegetative plant part to form roots while still attached to the parent plant.
Types of Layering • Two types of layering are: • Air Layering, which is the process of forcing roots to form on a stem, outside the soil • Ground layering, which is the process of extending a plant part into the ground, covering it with soil, and allowing it to root.
Separation • Separation involves removing new plants formed on specialized stems and separating them from the parent plant.
Division • Division is the technique of cutting specialized plant structures into sections and forcing each section to grow into a new plant.
Grafting • Grafting consists of uniting a hardwood scion from one plant with the rootstock of another similar hardwood plant to form a vascular connection between the two plant parts.
Types of Grafting Techniques • The following techniques could be used in the grafting method.
Budding • Budding, which is similar to grafting, consists of removing buds from one plant and placing them on stems of other closely related plants to form a new plant.
Tissue Culture • Tissue culture, or micro-propagation, involves placing a very small piece of plant tissue on a sterilized culture medium. • Under sterile conditions, the plant tissue multiplies and grows into new plants.
Advantages of Tissue Cultures • Advantages of tissue culture as a means of asexual reproduction are that: • It allows large numbers of offspring to be produced quickly • it allows growers to produce disease-free plants; • it is a cost-efficient method of reproducing plants; and • it allows plants to be produced that have the same characteristics as the parent plant.
Disadvantages of Tissue Cultures • Disadvantages of tissue culture include: • The costs of necessary tools and equipment • The preciseness of establishing and maintaining sterile conditions needed for plant development • The requirement of additional time and labor as compared to other methods of asexual propagation.
Summary • Growers use several methods to multiply or increase the numbers of plant species. • Propagation methods can be sexual (reproducing from seeds) or asexual (vegetative production).