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  2. Grafting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grafting

    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. Any extra bud that starts growing from the stem of the stock plant is removed.

  3. Rootstock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rootstock

    Grafting can also be done in stages; a closely related scion is grafted to the rootstock, and a less closely related scion is grafted to the first scion. Serial grafting of several scions may also be used to produce a tree that bears several different fruit cultivars, with the same rootstock taking up and distributing water and minerals to the ...

  4. Fruit tree propagation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_tree_propagation

    Grafting, 1870, by Winslow Homer — an example of grafting. Fruit tree propagation is usually carried out vegetatively (non-sexually) by grafting or budding a desired variety onto a suitable rootstock. Perennial plants can be propagated either by sexual or vegetative means.

  5. Nurse grafting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nurse_grafting

    Nurse grafting is a method of plant propagation that is used for hard-to-root plant material. If a desirable selection cannot be grown from seed (because a seed-grown plant will be genetically different from the parent), it must be propagated asexually in order to be genetically identical to the parent.

  6. Topophysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topophysis

    Topophysis occurs when scions (young shoots and twigs), buddings, or root cuttings continue to grow in the same way after grafting as they had while growing on the ortet. [1] [2] When the scion or propagule grows in the same branchlike way, it is called plagiotropic growth. [2]

  7. Vegetative reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetative_reproduction

    Grafting involves attaching a scion, or a desired cutting, to the stem of another plant called stock that remains rooted in the ground. Eventually both tissue systems become grafted or integrated and a plant with the characteristics of the grafted plant develops, [ 29 ] e.g. mango, guava, etc.

  8. Chip budding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chip_budding

    Chip budding is a grafting technique A chip of wood containing a bud is cut out of scion with desirable properties (tasty fruit, pretty flowers, etc.). A similarly shaped chip is cut out of the rootstock, and the scion bud is placed in the cut, in such a way that the cambium layers match. The new bud is usually fixed in place using grafting ...

  9. Tree of 40 Fruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_40_Fruit

    [2] [3] He began to graft buds from some of the over 250 heritage varieties grown there, some unique, onto a stock tree. [3] Over the course of about five years the tree accumulated branches from forty different "donor" trees, each with a different fruit, including almond , apricot , cherry , nectarine , peach and plum varieties.