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  2. Fruit tree propagation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_tree_propagation

    The new plant is severed only after it has successfully grown roots. Layering is the technique most used for propagation of clonal apple rootstocks. The most common method of propagating fruit trees, suitable for nearly all species, is grafting onto rootstocks. This in essence involves physically joining part of a shoot of a hybrid cultivar ...

  3. Grafting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grafting

    Bud grafting (also called chip budding or shield budding) uses a bud instead of a twig. [8] Grafting roses is the most common example of bud grafting. In this method a bud is removed from the parent plant, and the base of the bud is inserted beneath the bark of the stem of the stock plant from which the rest of the shoot has been cut.

  4. Tree of 40 Fruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_40_Fruit

    A Tree of 40 Fruit is one of a series of fruit trees created by the Syracuse University Professor Sam Van Aken using the technique of grafting. [1] Each tree produces forty types of stone fruit, of the genus Prunus, ripening sequentially from July to October in the United States. [2] [3]

  5. Plant reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_reproduction

    Fruit tree propagation is frequently performed by budding or grafting desirable cultivars , onto rootstocks that are also clones, propagated by stooling. In horticulture, a cutting is a branch that has been cut off from a mother plant below an internode and then rooted, often with the help of a rooting liquid or powder containing hormones.

  6. Horticulture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horticulture

    Propagation involves both sexual and asexual methods. [16] In sexual propagation seeds are used, while asexual propagation involves the division of plants, separation of tubers, corms, and bulbs - by use of techniques such as cutting, layering, grafting. [17]

  7. Agricultural cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_cycle

    Grafting is referred to as the artificial method of propagation in which parts of plants are joined together in order to make them bind together and continue growing as one plant. Grafting is mainly applied to two parts of the plant: the dicot and the gymnosperms due to the presence of vascular cambium between the plant tissues: xylem and phloem.

  8. Plant nursery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_nursery

    A whip is a tree with just a trunk and little to no branches. Whips can be grown from hardwood cuttings, seedlings, or propagated by budding, which is a method of grafting propagation where a single bud of a desired cultivar is grafted onto a rootstock plant. [75] In the case of budding, the rootstock will be older than the crown. [75]

  9. Cultivar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultivar

    A cultivar is a kind of cultivated plant that people have selected for desired traits and which retains those traits when propagated.Methods used to propagate cultivars include division, root and stem cuttings, offsets, grafting, tissue culture, or carefully controlled seed production.