Variation in Rooting Pattern of Leucaena leucocephala in Relation to Propagation System and Stock Mother Plants
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31357/jtfe.v9i1.3945Abstract
Lateral shoot cuttings are used for multiplication of Leucaena leucocephala clones to control lodging in pulpwood plantations. Variability in rooting pattern was evaluated in lateral cuttings from four types of mother plants (a) sand beds in shade house (SH), (b) sand beds with overhead shade, (c) open sand beds and (d) open field hedges (CMA) in a commercial Leucaena clone. Rooting rate of SH cuttings varied significantly with propagation conditions across two mist chambers (87% in MC 1 versus 68% in MC 2). Rooting pattern also differed with 77% cuttings in MC 1 having long root zone (>2.5 cm length from stem base) compared to only 10% plants in MC 2. Application of rooting hormone (IBA 5000 ppm) increased number of roots by 46% and root zone length by 39% in SH cuttings. Rooting rate did not vary between winter and summer season. Lateral cuttings from open sand bed and CMA had comparatively thicker stem with anatomical configuration of larger pith region, large diameter vessels in low frequency and sclerenchyma bundles, compared to mother plants raised in shade (a and b). Rooting rate was high (83-87%) in covered sand beds (a and b) compared to those (c and d) in open sunlight (43-68%). Majority of cuttings from open sand bed (85%) and CMA (93%) had short root zone (<2.5 cm length) compared to covered sand beds (30%). Clonal propagules with good root system can be produced from Leucaena cuttings when mother plants are maintained in shade and provided suitable propagation conditions.Downloads
Published
2019-08-03
How to Cite
Suraj, P., Suresh, M., Ranjeeth Babu, P., & Varghese, M. (2019). Variation in Rooting Pattern of Leucaena leucocephala in Relation to Propagation System and Stock Mother Plants. Journal of Tropical Forestry and Environment, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.31357/jtfe.v9i1.3945
Issue
Section
Articles
License
The publisher retain the copyrights of contents published, and all open access articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License[U1], which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.
You can download the Legal Code for this License at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/legalcode