Volume 38
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Author: Roger Dutcher
PP: 36
Author: Doug F. Hocking
PP: 77
Marketing. There is no doubt the vegetable industry is consumer driven and the sooner that is fully realized, the better. Buyers are no longer prepared to take what growers or agents think they want. Vegetables are competing with a whole range of other foodstuffs and as difficult as it may be to change vegetable products, it must be done. The customer is always right.
The marketing of vegetables starts when a grower first decides what type of vegetable to grow and the cultivar and the production system he will use. These all influence the product he finally sells. In Australia many growers make these decisions on what they did last year or perhaps what their agents or neighbours tell them. In Sydney we have Flemington Markets, one of the largest
Author: Bill Daughtry
PP: 420
The worst part about recycling water is the buildup of pathogens and their subsequent distribution back into the nursery. Presently, chlorination is the best and least expensive way to control these organisms. It is just a matter of time before the collection and recycling of irrigation water will be forced on this industry in order to control environmental pollution by fertilizer and agricultural chemical runoff.
Chlorine gas is an extremely dangerous chemical. Therefore,
Author: Richard A. Young
PP: 423
Examples: CaHCO3—calcium bicarbonate;
NaHCO3—sodium bicarbonate
Carbonates can be converted into bicarbonates by adding excess carbon dioxide. Example:
Na2CO2 + CO2 + H2O = HCO3
Sodium carbonate + CO2 + water = sodium bicarbonate
What problems does it cause? The most common problem associated with high levels of bicarbonate is that of unsightly deposits or precipitates on plant foliage. This problem lowers the visual quality of nursery stock, and thus can affect its salability.
Following
Author: Carl E. Whitcomb, Charles Elstrodt, Richard Benson
PP: 425
In order to study the combinations of water quality, calcium, and magnesium nutrition, and various sources of both elements a study was conducted in two locations during 1987. Analysis of the irrigation water at the two locations was as follows, in parts per million:
Author: Bonnie Lee Appleton
PP: 430
Author: Fred T. Davies Jr
PP: 432
Carbohydrate pools. There are three carbohydrate pools or sources in the plant system (14). These three pools consist of: 1. free reducing sugars (soluble carbohydrates such as glucose, fructose, sucrose), 2. storage carbohydrates (starches, insoluble carbohydrates), and 3. cell wall polysaccharides. Reducing sugars and storage carbohydrates are the most important for the rooting process.
Carbohydrates are used as building blocks for complex macromolecules in chemical pathways, and also serve as building blocks for structural elements. Keep in mind that in root initiation and development new cell walls are being formed from macromolecules largely composed of carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates are also energy sources. Primary requirements for rooting are: 1. parenchyma cells with the genetic
Author: Randy Davis
PP: 437
At Greenleaf we produce about 10 million liners annually. Most are propagated by cuttings, but we also propagate by seeds, grafting, budding and division, Our liners are grown either in ground beds or in containers, depending on the type program we have for production of that crop.
In our production the most economical method of liner production is through the utilization of raised ground beds rather than containers. Cuttings are rooted in ground beds, grown in this method and planted bareroot into 1- and 2-gal. containers. Using ground beds and planting bareroot we can reduce the cost of our liners, compared to propagating in containers, by about 8 to 10 cents per plant. The following are some methods that we use to propagate and grow our liners.
Author: Chris C. Threadgill
PP: 439
Over several years a new concept in seedling production has emerged that warrants consideration by the nursery industry. In this system tree seedlings are produced in bottomless containers or "milk cartons." I have been asked to present the advantages and disadvantages of both systems. Some of the differences are included below:
Author: Don Covan
PP: 441
From my experience in the production of trees using both cuttings and seeds, I believe that accelerated growth can best be obtained by giving special attention to the development of a well-branched fibrous root system and to the timely shifting up of the liner. At Simpson Nurseries we grow trees from bareroot liners, seed, softwood cuttings, hardwood cuttings, and from buds and grafts. However, the softwood production of trees compared to seedling production in bottomless containers is emphasized in the following information.
Author: Robert L. Byrnes
PP: 444
Introducing new plants to the trade is difficult for any nursery and for a small nursery with a limited marketing budget it is especially difficult. Many retail nurseries and landscapers are reluctant to try new plant materials citing lack of demand or unfamiliarity with the plants. Therefore, we feel the ability of a tree to flower at an early age is a major consideration when evaluating them for commercial potential. Most nurserymen will agree that a plant in flower has much more salability than one that is not, especially when the customer is not familiar with the plant. This approach may eliminate the
Author: John W. Day
PP: 447
Author: Natalie Peate
PP: 82
Two such systems were investigated:
- pressurized water fog,
- pressurized air/water fog.
The second system was selected for the following reasons:
- High pressure water lines used in the first system had been known to burst and could be dangerous in human terms. At that time, operating water pressures were quoted at around 900 psi (6200 kpa). In the air/water system, air pressures were quoted at around 60 psi (413 kpa) and water at about 5 psi (35 kpa), thus much safer. The lower pressures also
Author: Mike Bracken
PP: 451
Our experience is strictly from a grower's viewpoint. We buy our material at stage three from several tissue-culture laboratories and acclimate it ourselves. We have been producing tree liners from tissue culture for two years—patented red maples, three cultivars of birch, amelanchier, flowering cherry, and crab apples. Beginning production for our field-grown liner, we sell 20 percent of our tissue cultures as acclimated micropropagated liners.
While we still propagate from cuttings, our substantial commitment to tissue culture has given us a broad base for assessing the pros and cons of this technology. The
Author: David G. Ellis
PP: 453
Author: Gary Adams
PP: 456
The justification for this discussion is that liriopes and ophiopogons are used in huge numbers, that they are so easy to grow, that few people know the fine points of production, that there are cultivars of great merit which are virtually unknown. Evergreen Nursery has specialized in groundcover production, mainly ivy and liriopes, since the 1960s. At present we produce 24 cultivars of liriopes and ophiopogons.
What are the differences between liriopes and ophiopogons? The most useful point of identification is that the ophiopogon flowers hang down on their scape, while liriope flowers are held erect. Ophiopogons are slightly less hardy, are usually strongly rhizomatous, always bear the flowers down in the foliage and have a flower with a subinferior ovary. Liriope flowers bear a superior ovary. Cultural practices discussed apply equally to liriopes and ophiopogons unless otherwise indicated.
Differentiation between species and cultivars begins at the root system.
Author: T.E. Bilderback
PP: 462
Author: Wayne K. Sawyer
PP: 465
In the old process we used a manure spreader1 which required many time-consuming steps. The following procedure required four persons:
- A front-end loader was used to premix a four to one ratio of pine bark and sand.
- The premix was loaded into the spreader.
- Fertilizer and lime were added at the recommended rates.
- The spreader had to be moved forward periodically as it unloaded.
- The loader then pushed the mix into a pile.
To provide the quantity and quality of mix to meet our current
Author: William H. Bodnaruk Jr
PP: 467
To do the job, a mixer must produce a medium that is uniform, with little particle breakdown, on a consistent basis and in the volume required. We, at Jon's Nursery, realized we outgrew the "old batch mixer" when our daily needs exceeded about 30 cu. yd. per day. Several continuous mixing systems are on the market and, after much study, the Gleason equipment was purchased on the strength of the tumble drum method of mixing.
Jon's Nursery mix consists of pine bark, Canadian peat, and sand at approximately 4:2:1 by volume, amended with Osmocote NPK fertilizer at 15 lbs./yd.3. Micromax micronutrients at 1.5 lbs./yd.3
Author: Wayne Whiddon
PP: 468
Shelfer Nursery is a small container nursery of approximately 26 acres. We have 3500 ft2 of greenhouse space, used for 3¼-in. pots for azaleas and 2000 ft2 of 2¼-in. pots used for juniper propagation. The balance of the acreage is used for growing 1-, 2- and 3-gal.
Author: Gary S. Cobb, Dean R. Mills
PP: 470
We may prune a plant for several reasons. Most frequently we prune to increase branching. Pruning a limb temporarily reduces the auxin concentration within it and induces axillary buds to develop, producing a more dense, compact, and visually appealing plant. We may also prune to shape a plant or to control its size. We may prune out damaged or unhealthy branches. We have traditionally pruned a plant at transplanting with the expectation of improving its survivability.
All of us here understand and make use
Author: Derek Burch
PP: 472
This paper presents a checklist of some things that can go wrong in pesticide use. Proper pest control is not easy; it requires attention to detail before, during, and after the application both for effectiveness and, of course, for safety.
Author: Charles H. Gilliam
PP: 475
Three guidelines are useful when planning a weed control program. First, no one herbicide will control all weeds. Second, in the southeastern United States, most herbicide applications will remain effective for only 10 to 14 weeks. Finally, proper timing of the preemergence herbicide to a weed-free area is essential for good weed control. For example, in Alabama, preemergence herbicides should be applied in middle to late February, just prior to weed seed germination, and a second application should be made early to middle July. Most field producers now combine a herbicide providing control for annual grasses
Author: Ian Gordon
PP: 84
(a) temperature reduction; (c) frost protection;
(b) humidity control; (d) application of pesticides.
The plant propagator is primarily concerned with the control of the humidity in the propagation environment. Temperature reduction through the evaporative cooling effect of fog droplets can be a secondary advantage of fog in propagation.
A clear distinction must be made between fog and mist in plant propagation. Intermittent mist is used to provide a film of moisture over the leaves of cuttings and other evaporating surfaces in the propagation house. Fog provides the means to directly increase the relative humidity of the greenhouse atmosphere with little or no free water application to the leaves of the cuttings. The absence of this free water from the leaves of the cuttings provides a number of advantages to the plant propagator:
- reduced leaching of nutrients from leaves;
- improved aeration of
Author: M. Thetford, C.H. Gilliam, W.J. Foster
PP: 479
Weed control has become increasingly important during propagation, with many growers direct sticking cuttings in outdoor beds or greenhouses. Limited work has been done in propagation research evaluating herbicidal activity on stock plants and subsequent root initiation (1,2). Recent research has shown that some herbicides suppress root growth on woody plants (3). Johnson (4) evaluated the effects of herbicides on rooting percentages and root quality of four ornamental species in New Jersey and reported a significant reduction in the root quality of Cotoneaster horizontalis in all herbicide treatments. Rooting percentages of C. horizontalis were reduced by Dual, Devrinol and Ronstar treatments, while rooting percentages of Rhododendron were reduced only in the Surflan treatment.
The object of this study was to evaluate the effects of selected preemergence applied herbicides on the rooting of certain ornamental species grown in the southern United States.
Author: Ted Goreau, Charlie Parkerson
PP: 482
Author: Clayton W. Fuller, Penny L. Digioia
PP: 489
Propagating facility. We no longer use solid benches with media. We prefer flats as they allow us to move the rooted cuttings to a hardening-off house as soon as they are rooted. Flats also allow for a more efficient use of our propagation structures.
Provisions for media heating, either hot water pipes under the bench or bio-therms on the bench, are necessary to maintain the 74°F medium temperature we use. We use hot water pipes.
Water quality should be checked. In addition to pH, chemicals added by the water supplier or naturally occurring chemicals in the water supply can cause failure.
The mist or fog system used must be reliable, so that
Author: Frederick L. Dabney Jr
PP: 493
The subject of this paper is the importance of producing disease and drought resistant plants. We constantly produce plant material because it is an old favorite our customers always buy, because it has a spectacular flower or fragrance, or maybe just because for a variety of personal and sentimental reasons, we just like it. I mention this last because I know I frequently fall prey to my own sentiments.
At Quansett Nurseries we produce several hundred Syringa vulgaris plants each year and never have trouble selling them and yet each year we consistently spend time and energy and sprays trying, usually unsuccessfully, to keep them free of powdery mildew. There is a magnificent block of deciduous azaleas at the Arnold Arboretum that, when in bloom,
Author: Richard W. Lighty
PP: 496
But during the 18th century, prior to the opening of the Far East, there had been a frenzy of exploration centered on the eastern coast of North America, involving men like John and William Bartram, Andre Michaux, John Mitchell, and Peter Kalm. These people had friends and patrons in Europe who were avid collectors of minerals, artifacts, animals and plants. The cabinets of curiosity which they assembled served as study collections for these wealthy savants and later as nuclei around which museums, arboretums and zoological gardens were formed. They served also as introduction gardens from which new and useful plants were distributed. Indeed, many of our most useful and widely grown ornamentals came into gardens via this
Author: D.L. Hensley, S.C. Wiest, C.E. Long, J.A. Robbins, J. Pair, F.D.
PP: 500
Author: Richard H. Munson
PP: 504
In order to understand more fully how the practice of trademarking has affected our industry several examples are given below. It should be understood, however, that
Author: Kris R. Bachtell
PP: 509
Red maple grows best in locations with good quality soil and adequate moisture. When transplanted into highly disturbed soils typical of new construction sites in the Chicago area, red maple usually performs poorly. These soils are alkaline, with pH levels often above 7.4, and they also possess a high bulk density because of their clay content. Planted in these conditions, red maple is slow to establish and often succumbs to stress-related problems. Plants which survive long enough to become established
Author: David Schmidt
PP: 514
Author: Howard W. Barnes
PP: 517
Author: Bruce Macdonald
PP: 87
The scope of bench top-working can be appreciated by summarizing the reasons why propagators use this method:
- It is particularly useful for producing unusual and novel plant material. Examples of novel bench grafting combinations include Cotoneaster horizontalis on C. frigidus, Hedera helix ‘Pixie’ on × Fatshedera lizei, Euonymus fortunei ‘Emerald ‘n’ Gold’ on E. europaea, Juniperus chinensis var. procumbens ‘Nana’ on J. virginiana and Betula pendula ‘Trost's Dwarf’ on B. pendula.
- Novelties can also be described as "custom-built" trees—for example, using interstems of the attractive peeling bark of Prunus serrula. The
Author: Bonnie Lee Appleton
PP: 521
Author: Ralph Shugert
PP: 525
Basamid-granular (active ingredient: Dazomet) is a product from BASF in the Federal Republic of Germany, and when incorporated into the soil has nematicidal, fungicidal, and herbicidal effects. It therefore is classed as a chemical soil sterilant.
The first testing at Zelenka Nursery was conducted by our Research and Development Department in October, 1985, in the hope of finding a substitute for methyl bromide. The latter product had not given us satisfactory weed control and the per acre price, in western Michigan, had steadily increased each year. The Basamid R&D tests have proven satisfactory and this product is now an accepted production practice of Zelenka Nursery. One of our most serious weed problems, particularly in seed/transplant beds, is yellow nutsedge (Cyperus esculentus) which escapes
Author: R.E. Byers
PP: 527
The optimum time for rodenticide treatment to reduce vole damage to trees is in late fall (October, November, December). Snow gives the animals a great deal of cover and may prevent the grower from treating during this period. Since reproduction rates are high in the late summer and early fall, the optimal time for vole control is after harvest and just prior to the damaging period. In
Author: Joerg Leiss
PP: 531
In regard to Q. palustris ‘Sovereign’, Dirr (1) reports that the originator, Coles Nursery, abandoned the growing of this plant due to graft incompatibility. I can not speak on this phenomenon, but would suggest that successful graft unions could be perpetuated by using piece roots of the original plant or from successful unions.
Today I would like to speak to you about a trial that involves the grafting of Q. robur root pieces and Q. macrocarpa, burr oak scions.
Author: Nancy S. Goodwin
PP: 533
There are no cyclamen species indigenous to North America. They occur around the Mediterranean basin, throughout southern and central Europe, western Asia, and north Africa; however, they are easily naturalized in many parts of this country.
As I gradually began to build a collection of almost all of the 19 species of cyclamen, I was frustrated to find that most of them were not available in this country. I ordered tubers from every source I could locate and was extremely disappointed to discover that most of what I received were wild collected plants and fewer than half of them grew. I then discovered that they were on Appendix II of the Endangered Species List which means that they are considered plants in peril, and that a CITES permit is required for exporting or importing them. In 1976, 256,000 tubers
Author: Thomas R. Simpson
PP: 537
One thing I have learned in the nursery industry is that there is seldom only one correct way to perform a nursery task. As sure as you think you have perfected a method, someone else will come along with a new technique, an improved product, or a totally different way of thinking that produces equal or even better results.
When I returned in 1978 to the family homestead and business of which I had been a part for 10 years as a school boy, I soon attended my first series of nursery seminars and meetings. At one of them I was amazed to see a friendly but heated debate between two nationally respected propagators on the subject of rooting cuttings. One fought tooth-and-nail for the practice of "wounding the cutting within an inch of its' life"; and the other was equally adamant about not wounding. Both men were highly respected experts in the field. Each truly believed his method was the best, and each proved his points with excellent yet comparable results. The reason I mention this is because our methods of budding may be totally different from yours.
Author: Brian Bunge
PP: 542
Producing crabapples on their own roots can eliminate these problems with some advantages over budding and grafting. Multistem crabapples can be easily grown from own-root crabapples. Other advantages of own-root are lower costs in the making of cuttings, and the production of a more fibrous and massive root system. With a better root system, transplanting of balled and burlapped stock will be more successful.
When propagating by cuttings, good vigorous stock plants are needed to promote softwood growth. Stock plants should be fertilized and pruned in late winter or early spring, and should be irrigated to increase the amount of
Author: Philip L. Carpenter, Michael N. Dana
PP: 544
The merits of propagation methods of a particular plant should be based not only on the ease with which a plant can be propagated by a particular method but also on how well that plant does in its eventual planting site. Crabapples historically have been propagated by T-budding on apple rootstock and, more recently, by chip budding on apple roots. Tom Simpson described these methods in detail in a paper preceding this one. In recent years some nurserymen have used rooted cuttings as a means of propagating crabapples. The two main reasons for shifting to cuttings are: 1) cuttings require less skill to take than budding, and 2) crabapples on their own roots should have less root suckers when the plants are grown on to maturity (1). It is fairly easy to train a person to take cuttings, but T-budding or chip budding requires a longer training period and the chances of a successful take, coupled with some degree of speed, is not too great for the novice propagator. Brian
Author: Dan W. Studebaker, D.M. Maronek, B.M. Oberly
PP: 550
Recently, the work of Gouveia (1) and McGuire (2) have shown that Taxus species can be rooted with bottom heat in early spring and planted in late spring or fall the same year. In addition, McGuire (2) found that the spring-rooted taxus were equal to or superior to taxus cuttings taken in the fall, rooted on bottom heat, and spring-planted. Cuttings propagated on bottom heat are ready to plant sooner (6) than those without bottom heat (4). In addition, the utilization of bottom heat has eliminated the need to strip needles from the basal end of the cuttings thus saving time and physical injury to propagators (5,3). However, for us—propagating taxus in the spring—does not fit in time-wise with other nursery operations during the busy spring season.
Author: Thomas J. Banko
PP: 554
Author: Bruce Macdonald
PP: 97
The role of this paper is to relate our experiences as a basis for
Author: Ken Roe, Philip Sommer
PP: 559
Boxwoods are native to Europe and parts of Asia. Buxus sempervirens has been in cultivation since the time of ancient Rome. During the middle ages it was cultivated in castle gardens and monasteries. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries it was in general use in Europe. It was during that time that colonists brought boxwood to America.
Along the coast in the states of Virginia, Maryland, and the Carolinas B. sempervirens cultivars did beautifully, but as the people moved westward, midwestern nurserymen learned of the limits of its range. Midwestern nurserymen have suffered many disappointments when trying to grow B. sempervirens cultivars in their fields. They have not been able to tolerate midwestern (Zones 4 and 5) winters characterized by temperatures of -10
Author: Dixon P. Hoogendoorn
PP: 563
Viburnum dentatum is used as the understock. We have experimented with other types of understock, V. lantana for example, but we found V. dentatum to be far superior (1). When purchasing understock make sure that you find a reputable seedling grower that understands your needs. We use a one-year seedling approximately 3/16 in. caliper. We receive our understock in February before the busy spring season begins. The buds are removed from the lower third of the stem to help control suckering, a common problem in grafting this species. The roots are trimmed and the seedlings are potted into 2¼ in. clay
Author: R. Wayne Mezitt
PP: 566
During the past year I find that my situation as an introducer of new rhododendron cultivars has become affected by an alarming development. Micropropagation of many of the cultivars my nursery has introduced is apparently producing significant numbers of plants that have characteristics different from those of the parent plants.
Let me first note that the vast majority of micropropagated plants now in the market appear to be normal. It is not my intent to discredit responsible use of the micropropagation technique. However, I am very concerned that the problem of abnormal
Author: Ralph Shugert, Bruce Briggs
PP: 571
MODERATOR SHUGERT: The first question is: does the Society have copies of the early publication, Propagator, prior to the bound Proceedings?
RALPH SHUGERT: I have a copy of the meeting held in Louisville, Kentucky in 1929. There are three other Proceedings that are in the Library of Congress. I will be glad to photocopy the copy that I have for the individual who asked the question.
RAY HESER: In the fall we plant winter rye, plow it in, then millet, buckwheat. or a similar crop for the summer, and then back to the winter rye. We use ammonium nitrate to help break down the organic matter.
RALPH SHUGERT: We have a 2 year program with sudan, rye, sudan and rye, for our low organic soils. We try to use an application of animal manure (turkey manure that is available to us) with every cover crop planting.
CLAYTON FULLER: The first step is a soil test to measure
Author: John McGuire
PP: 575
His parents hoped he would be a priest, but instead he chose to join his brothers in the nursery business in 1946. Once he chose this path he focused entirely on making his company successful. His accomplishments were many. He joined the International Plant Propagators' Society in 1954 and since that time he has served continuously on Society committees. Today he serves on the Nominating Committee. Our recipient was president of our Region; he has been president of his State Association and the New England Nurserymens' Association, and he represented his state as
Author: Daniel C. Milbocker
PP: 576
The concept of ventilated high humidity propagation was developed by 1978 and the Agritech humidifier was introduced to make it into a workable propagation system. Several other types of humidifying equipment were also introduced but none were based upon the ventilated high humidity concept. The poor performance of some of these installations
Author: Calvin Chong
PP: 580
Author: Jeffrey F. Derr
PP: 584
Author: Robert D. Wright
PP: 587
Nutrient absorption and subsequent plant growth are related to an adequate supply of nutrients in the medium solution (Figure 1). As the nutrient levels around the root increases up to a certain point, there will be a proportional increase in nutrient uptake and growth. The level of nutrients required for optimal growth is different for different species. However, it has been shown that the level of nutrients required for optimal growth of young seedling
Author: Joseph Dallon Jr
PP: 590
Author: Jean Du Moulin
PP: 104
The methods used to grow these plants in our nursery have resulted from many trials focusing on different aspects of their propagation. These include stock plants, types of cuttings, hygiene, hormones, rooting media, potting up procedures, environmental conditions, and nutrition of the cuttings.
We are constantly looking to improve the growing conditions for the cuttings, and to fine tune the whole propagation process.
The propagation factors to be considered are:—
Stockplants. Stockplant gardens were established at the nursery to ensure good quality cutting material, free from disease and insects. These gardens supply about 80% of our cutting material, and the remaining 20% is gained from private gardens and nursery container stock. Cutting material can be taken from the stock garden throughout the year, although there is little growth during the winters
Author: M.T. McClelland, M.A.L. Smith
PP: 593
Author: Jack Alexander
PP: 600
CHRIS ROGERS: Rhododendron ‘New Patriot’ is an open pollinated selection of a plant whose parentage is R. lsquo;P.J.M.’ crossed with an evergreen form of a pink R. mucronulatum. ‘New Patriot’ blooms in Hopkinton, MA one week before R. ‘P.J.M.’ in late April. It is very floriferous with nearly red flowers that tend to bloom two inches down the stems. It blooms over a week period. The flowerbuds seem to be hardy to Zone 5. It is a vigorous, wide-branched plant and, after 10 years, we can expect a plant that is 4 ft tall and 3 ft wide. It was registered (American
Author: Stephen D. Verkade, George E. Fitzpatrick
PP: 606
Nursery growers routinely rely on regulated chemicals during plant propagation and production. Fungicides, insecticides, herbicides, fertilizer materials, and fuel are all resources that growers use to profitably produce high quality plant material.
Public concern for protecting the environment has resulted in the establishment of governmental authorities empowered to develop rules that regulate chemical storage and use. A primary concern is the contamination of ground water by hazardous materials including pesticides, fertilizers, and fuels. When introduced into the soil, these chemicals can move downward into the water table and eventually can be drawn toward wells supplying public drinking water.
The development of regulations on hazardous material storage and use is required by the federal government, but has been delegated to state and local governments. In some areas this responsibility has been assumed at the state level, such as the
Author: Barry Larkman
PP: 106
This is a practice that research and long usage has proven effective. However, there are disadvantages with some species. These are:
- when the internodal length is exceptionally long, the cuttings are difficult to handle and become unwieldy when placed in a community tray.
- if the plant material is badly tangled (as often happens with climbers) it is difficult and time consuming to extract "two node" cutting material. There is also a risk of plant tissue damage.
- There are obvious arithmetical disadvantages if each cutting has to have two nodes should there be a shortage of plant material.
Whilst over time there must have been research into root production on single-node (leaf-bud) cuttings, a brief search of the literature revealed little information
Author: Angus Stewart
PP: 109
As a tribute to Merv Turner I would like to review the results to date of the "Bush Gems" breeding program. I hope that the experience gained with kangaroo paws will be of assistance to those interested in the genetic improvement of Australian plants.
The genus Anigozanthos contains species with a spectacular range of colours and flower forms and often within a species a range of colour forms exists. The large range of colours and colour combinations available to the breeder has only been partially exploited to date.
Author: Tony Cupitt
PP: 112
The main reasons for having stock plants are to:
- Obtain an increased strike rate in less time.
- Obtain large quantities of favourable wood.
- Increase efficiency in the ease and speed of collecting cuttings.
- Improve convenience and cut down travelling time.
- Ensure the early introduction of new cultivars thus discarding inferior forms.
- Ensure accurate labelling of plants from which cuttings are taken—cuttings are always taken from accurately labelled plants.
If stock plants are regularly replaced with stock which have been hygienically grown and have good vigour and juvenility, high strike rates will follow.
Stock plants should be controlled and managed by the
Author: Peter Ollerenshaw
PP: 116
The Australian landscape has been radically altered over the years, and now in many regions there is very little surviving of the original vegetation. Some of the major events which have affected the environment include the establishment of the sheep industry, massive development in wheat farming, economic depressions, drought, and the introduction of the rabbit [1). More recent events include harvesting forests for wood chips, strip mining, and the destruction of rainforests.
Since the mid-1970's Botanic Gardens have become aware of the need to be involved in the conservation of species. The International Union for Conservation of Natural Resources was responsible for early initiatives in this area producing the red data books, which list rare, vulnerable, and endangered species.
Author: M.W. Barrett
PP: 40
Author: R.N. Spooner-Hart
PP: 119
Since the large scale production of synthetic pesticides following World War II, the most common approach to pest control in agriculture and horticulture has been prophylactic application of chemicals, based on potential insect and disease threats. Recent increased awareness of the limitations and side effects of pesticides is causing this attitude to be rethought. Problems associated with pesticide use include widespread resistance in insect and mite pests and pathogens, elevation of organisms to pest status through elimination of natural suppressive agents, major environmental damage from some pesticides, and human health and safety concerns (in particular mutagenic effects of pesticides). With a number of crop plants, phytotoxic injury from pesticides is a major problem, and there is evidence that regular pesticide use may suppress plant growth (15). In addition, while the presence of pests constitutes barriers to international trade, so do unacceptable levels of
Author: Wilbur C. Anderson, Patricia Miller
PP: 128
Research in our laboratory determined planting out of in vitro peas directly from multiplication medium was not practical because of nearly 100% mortality. Therefore, in vitro rooting was essential for a complete vegetative propagation system. In vitro rooting experiments were nonresponsive when testing varying rates of auxins, ancymidol, inorganic salts, and activated charcoal. Placing the cultures in darkness
Author: Gerald B. Straley
PP: 130
A wide range of growing conditions in these zones, depending on aspect, soil and rock types, exposure and elevation, create microhabitats for a variety of plant species. Many of these habitats can be successfully recreated at lower elevations in the Pacific Northwest, even on the wet coast. The potential for using native plants for the drier interior of the Pacific Northwest has not been realized.
The plants discussed in this paper include those true alpines as well as some from lower elevations in montane meadows. Although British Columbia's flora will be stressed, a number of plants from the Pacific Northwest or Western North America are also included. Some of the more familiar alpine plants, at
Author: Wilbur L. Bluhm
PP: 135
This presentation will not include plants growing at higher elevations, nor the grasses (Poaceae or Graminae), sedges (Cyperaceae), rushes (Juncaceae), the many families of water plants, nor some of the lower plant families, such as club-mosses (Lycopodiaceae), and selaginella (Selaginellaceae). But even without them, the number of Northwest native herbaceous perennials is enormous, and the potential for their use is substantial.
Relatively little use is currently made of these plants. Competition of plants from other parts of the world, especially from Eastern North America, Europe, China, and Japan, and traditional use habits are among reasons for the tardy recognition of Northwest natives. Limited interest has delayed much needed selection,
Author: Linda B. Aberbom
PP: 138
California is the third largest state in area in the United States, covering over 150,000 square miles. The state's topography is diverse, ranging from 276 ft. below sea level in Death Valley to 14,494 ft. above sea level at the peak of Mt. Whitney—the lowest and highest elevations in the contiguous United States.
The Sierra Nevada mountains to the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west form the natural boundaries which isolate the native flora. Plants cut off from the relatives of their family or genus evolve and adapt to different environmental conditions. The genetic make-up changes when free pollination among the taxa of the continent does not take place to homogenize the species.
California is a Mediterranean climate zone of winter rainfall, summer drought. This weather pattern creates xeriphytic plants; that is, plants that live in moist conditions while, at the same time, have physiological mechanisms to protect themselves from stress during long, dry periods, an
Author: Susan Schaff
PP: 141
Seed processing is aided by proper collection of material in the field. There are many methods of collecting seed but all generally produce either dry or wet material to process. The seed processor will evaluate the crop to determine the best method or methods of separating the seed from the contaminants.
An important prerequisite for efficient and effective seed cleaning of dry seed is that the seed is completely threshed and as free flowing as possible. This may require removal of awns or beards or breaking up of pods, seed heads, or seed clusters. To minimize losses of good seed, these clusters, heads, or
Author: Rick Wells
PP: 146
Ensete is a member of the Musaceae family, which also includes Strelitza, Ravonala, Heliconia, and Musa (the edible banana). Abyssinian bananas were usually listed with Musa until about 30 years ago. They differ from Musa in that they do not have rhizomes (produce no natural offsets), have much larger seed (up to 1 in. in diameter), and have some technical differences in their pollen. The fruits of Ensete are usually
Author: Bruce McTavish
PP: 148
We are presently growing in excess of 100 species of native plants. These plants include alpine perennials, xerophytic plants from the dry lands, and species from West Coast rain forests. The variety of plants demands close assessment and control of the cultural conditions under which they are managed in the nursery.
Author: John H. Russell
PP: 151
Cloning parent tree selections. Rooted cuttings have been used in the establishment of British Columbia's seed orchards and clone banks as an alternative to grafting. Cloning of first generation parent tree selections, which were mostly over 60 years old, was usually done by grafting. However, rooted cuttings were used where grafting techniques had not yet been developed.
Graft incompatibility is a serious problem
Author: Campbell G. Davidson
PP: 156
The basis of any breeding program requires sound knowledge of the taxonomy of the particular plant. When we established the breeding program in Potentilla I found that the taxonomy of the species was very confused. It was, therefore, necessary to become involved in a taxonomic study of the plant to help define the complex and identify problem areas. There are up to 10 different species reported in the shrubby group (1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9). However, there is no overall concensus on which is the best taxonomic approach.
One of the approaches utilized to study the taxonomic status was to establish breeding relationships among the groups. This was accomplished by crossing between the major types reported in the literature. The concept of gene exchange and limits to gene
Author: Noel P. Arrold
PP: 45
In Australia, mushroom cultivation began about 1930 when Dr. Noble, then Chief Biologist of the N.S.W. Department of Agriculture, was able to establish mushroom growing in outdoor ridge beds in the County of Cumberland. Production became established in disused railway tunnels at Wynyard, Helensburgh, Lithgow, Bowral, and Glenbrook. Nowadays mushrooms are grown in specially insulated buildings where temperature, humidity, and CO2 are carefully controlled. The Australian industry at the present time has about 80 growers producing 15 thousand tonnes of mushrooms per annum with a gross value of A$50 million.
Mushroom Spawn. "Spawn" is the name given to the mycelium of the mushroom. Spores are produced from special structures called basidia on the gills of the mushroom. These
Author: Robert L. Ticknor
PP: 161
Thirty different plants were acquired in 1959 and 1960 from local and eastern nurseries including one or more of the following species: Pieris floribunda, P. formosa and its variety forrestii, P. japonica, P. nana, P. phillyreifolia, and P. taiwanensis. Also obtained was a plant of P. ‘Forest Flame’, which is reported to be a natural hybrid between P. formosa var. forrestii and P. japonica. Results of attempts at interspecific hybridization in Pieris by Dr. Richard Jaynes and I have been
Author: John G. Lofthouse
PP: 164
In my opinion, it is wrong to produce new cultivars for "new cultivars sake". I have been trying during the past few years to create rhododendrons with new "appearances"; flowers having longer corollas, flamboyant calyxes, also ruffles and frills. Some of these exciting new cultivars have recently been coming into bloom. The best will be selected and propagated for the retail trade. One might wonder about how to obtain them. Distribution by propagating nurseries, such as "Clays", "Briggs", and others, have made some of these cultivars available, world-wide. Others, and the newer introductions, can be obtained as
Author: Kathleen S. Freeland
PP: 167
More than 50 species of trees and shrubs of this genus are distributed in southeast Asia and Australia, the majority of which are tropical and amenable to cultivation only within warmer areas of the U.S. such as Florida and California. These plants (some of which have proven root hardy if mulched) flower on new wood and will produce vegetative growth that flowers the following summer. However, the flowers cannot equal those of plants
Author: Dennis Connor
PP: 169
Our awardee for 1988 has served as President and Treasurer for the California Association of Nurserymen and has been involved with many other organizations—The Cal-Aggie Foundation at the University of California, Davis, the U.C. Foundation Plant Materials Service for clean seed and nursery stock, California's Governor George Deukmejian's Advisory Staff, the Sacramento Tree Foundation, the U.S. National Arboretum, Board member of Sacramento's Sumitomo Bank, and 54 other business, charitable, political, and educational committees.
He is a charter member of the Western Region and served as its President in 1973–74. He was IPPS International President in 1977.
He was born March 9, 1927, and has three children, Loren, George Samuel, and JoAnn, plus six grandchildren.
I am proud to announce his name, Mr. George Oki, Oki Nursery Company, Sacramento, California.
Author: Fraser M. Hancock
PP: 170
Leslie Hancock, a recipient of the IPPS Eastern Region Award of Merit in 1968, developed the Burlap Cloud method of propagation as a result of experimentation in adapting a system of propagation he had witnessed in Nanking, China. The system he had observed there consisted of beds of soil which had raised lips of formed soil. These beds were flooded like miniature rice paddies and cuttings of suitable shrubs were plunged into the slurry of water and soil. Immediately following this process the beds were covered with dense reed mats which shaded the cuttings from
Author: Paul Reimer
PP: 177
During his life in Canada, one of his major interests was the breeding of dogwoods. His goal was to combine the best qualities of two dogwoods: Cornus nuttalli (Pacific flowering dogwood) and Cornus florida (Eastern flowering dogwood). He hoped to produce a plant having the fine flowering size of C. nuttalii and the autumn color of C. florida. A number of promising crosses were developed, some of which had weeping habits. In 1948, the Fraser and Vedder rivers overflowed wiping out most of his potential hybrids. Fortunately, one cross between C. florida and C. nuttallii was so promising that it was cloned and lined out at this
Author: Donald E., James A. Ekstrom
PP: 180
A group of small to intermediate sized trees that is not widely known or used, but sought after, is the genus Stewartia. Comprised of about six different types, all are somewhat similar, differing mainly in flower size and tree size or shape.
Stewartia pseudocamellia is probably the best known with closely related S. koreana being very similar. We have worked with S. ovata, S. sinensis, and S. monadelpha, also with limited success in each species. At Ekstrom Nursery we have had the most success with S. pseudocamellia, S. monadelpha: S. pseudocamellia as rooted cuttings and S. monadelpha as seedlings. Because there is little written on this genus most of our knowledge has come from trial and error experiences.
As I said, we use seed propagation and softwood summer cuttings. The seed is held in five-valved pods which we try to collect, generally, just prior to pod opening, usually in October. As they dry they will open but the seed is not easy to remove. Once the seeds
Author: Charles E. Tubesing
PP: 184
Author: R.P. Regan, W.M. Probesting
PP: 187
Asexual propagation of selected, superior trees is being studied as a more rapid method to realize genetic and economic gains. Development of superior Douglas-fir clones for the Christmas tree industry has been underway in the Department of Horticulture at Oregon State University for about 15
Author: Anton B. Thomsen
PP: 192
The first part of my talk is about "Conifer Propagation in Denmark". As we are the largest grower of conifers propagated by cuttings in Scandinavia and, as most of the other nurseries do as we do, it will be our way you will be hearing about. First a few words about the climate and wages because these two factors have great influence on explaining how and why we do things as we do.
Denmark is located approximately as far north as Sitka, Alaska, so we have short days during the winter and long summer days. The winter weather varies a lot from year to year. A few years ago we had temperatures down to -30°C (-22°F), but usually it is between +5° to -20°C, (41° to -4°F), changing between frost and rainy weather several times
Author: Kevin Handreck
PP: 49
A draft of the Standard is about to be released (June 1, 1988) for a 3-month period of public comment. That comment will then be considered by the committee which has the task of developing the Standard, so some of the details given here are likely to have been modified before the Standard is finalized.
Author: Bev Greenwell
PP: 198
Early fall frosts are to our advantage by putting the plants into dormancy slightly earlier than other places. Late spring frosts can be a problem after plants have started growing.
Our winter protection is based on encouraging acclimation, using the plants own abilities to withstand cold. We do everything we can to encourage cold acclimation in the fall, and everything we can to keep them dormant all winter, until danger of frost is over in spring.
Eighty percent of our business is in the production of lining-out stock, mostly deciduous and broadleaf evergreen shrubs. All cuttings are
Author: John Byland
PP: 201
A few years ago when our old temporary wooden propagation structures were beginning to show their age we decided to build more modern propagation structures.
As a part of this modernization we investigated the possibility of using a fog system for the following reasons.
- To speed up rooting time by using higher greenhouse temperatures so as to turn material in the propagation structure over more frequently.
- To reduce the occurrence of overwatering the rooting media, causing the cuttings to decay.
- To reduce the amount
Author: Dennis M. Connor
PP: 204
Actinidia arguta ‘Ananasnaja’. This is commonly known as the Siberian gooseberry. It is a deciduous vine much like Actinidia deliciosa, except that the foliage is narrower and devoid of hairs. This cultivar was selected for the large size of its fruit (¾ in. to 1½ in. in diameter) which has lime-green flesh and a smooth skin; the fruit can be eaten like a grape—skin and all. The fruit ripens in September
Author: Steve Lazarz
PP: 206
Calatheas are a bit more exacting in their cultural requirements than many other types of interior foliage plants. They
Author: Arie Altman, Tuvia Rothem
PP: 207
Recently, we developed a new, improved, aeroponics system, based on ultrasonic-generated fine fog. The system consists of 4 modules, each made of a lower opaque plastic compartment which contains the roots, and an upper transparent hood for the shoots. The modules are fed from underneath by a central ultrasonic fog generator, which releases a fine, 1 to 5 micron droplet, fog. The fog is equally distributed into the lower and upper compartments of the 4 modules, or can be applied to each one of them separately. The system is modular, electronically controlled, and the fog can be applied intermittently, at any pre-set cycle. Water
Author: Cherng-Hsi Ling, Leslie K.C. Clay
PP: 209
Micropropagation: Advantages and Disadvantages. The tremendous potential benefits of vegetative clonal propagation in the genetic improvement and mass production of forest trees have been fully recognized and critically discussed in recent years (1,2,3,5,6,8,9,11,12,13,14,15). The most significant of these is the capture of all the genetic gains obtained through breeding and selection. Micropropagation and rooted cuttings are the two most important vegetative propagation methods that can be employed in
Author: Eva I. Hecht-Poinar, F.W. Cobb Jr, R.D. Raabe, J.B. Franklin
PP: 215
Sixteen native oak species are recognized in California. These belong to three subgenera: the intermediate oaks, the black oaks, and the white oaks. However, extensive hybridization within each subgenus has been well documented, resulting in highly variable intermediate types. Noticeable differences in disease susceptibility and levels of insect attacks of individual trees have been
Author: Bruce Briggs, Steve McCulloch
PP: 218
My eldest son, who at that time was in junior high school, also joined us as he was very interested in research, and we put him to work making media. Along with fellow nurserymen, Les Clay and Bob Hart, we worked first on trying to get plants established in aseptic culture.
Among the problems in those early days was a lack of materials, such as the cytokinin, 2iP. Actually, it is amazing how little we were off compared to research that was being done with herbaceous plants. It was really a matter of
Author: David C. Hannaby
PP: 224
Notcutts' interest in micropropagation began in the late 1970's when the company realised the potential for the technique on a modern nursery. What was less clear was what specific role would develop for micropropagation in the nursery stock industry and what production levels for the technique would be appropriate.
Initially micropropagated plants were brought in from commercial laboratories and closer links were formed with one of the UK laboratories. However, it soon became apparent that an on-site laboratory was necessary and in 1980 a laboratory was constructed within the propagation unit at Woodbridge.
The laboratory now produces approximately 120 subjects and represents perhaps 10 to 15 percent of Notcutts' production.
Author: Margaret M. Dean
PP: 229
One villain is the white coat worn by the laboratory worker. People in white coats seem threatening but the white coat has its place. A lot of bleach is used for sterilisation and white is the only practical colour to wear. It also shows up any grubbiness and this helps to maintain high standards. So the white coat is just a useful tool.
The second villain is the "Keep Out" sign on the laboratory door. This is even more destructive. The funny person in the white coat kept behind closed doors must be up to something sinister. Again there are good reasons for "Keep Out" signs. A laboratory where muddy boots are frequently tramping through will be impossible to maintain to the required standard of hygiene and too many curious visitors can use
Author: Shih-Foong Chin
PP: 53
Author: Peter C. Harper
PP: 232
The starter plant producer suffers from disadvantages shared by all component industries. They are at the base of a long production chain (Table 1). Very little of the cash which funds the chain gets back to base. In the example chosen the retail margin is four times the starter plant selling price.
This is less significant than the vulnerability of the producer to competition from more conventional propagules which have a price advantage over most of the market and buyers are familiar with the technique of handling them. Most of all the supplier has no real control over the market nor any means to influence it.
Until recently the micropropagation techniques were found to be so intriguing that the industry seemed to be driven by technology with the market a secondary force. At that time it seemed that
Author: Jonathan Crowe
PP: 237
Twyford Plant Laboratories is principally active in the ornamental plant sector and it is here that tissue culture is growing fastest as a propagation technique. Over the last 10 years, the market for tissue-cultured plants in Europe in the ornamental sector has grown from under 10 million to approximately 100 million in 1987/88.
There are seven major factors which account for this outstanding growth.
This paper will take each of these attributes in turn and examine how one company, Twyford Plant Laboratories has used each of them to develop a market.
- High health plants. In this area we have looked for plants which have significant disease problems arising from repeated conventional vegetative
Author: Allan C. Cassells
PP: 240
The aim of this article is to attempt a state-of-the-art appraisal of micropropagation strategies so that the purchaser of microplants can be reasonably assured that they are likely to be fit for the purpose intended.
Micropropagation pathway analysis. The micropropagation procedure involves critical decision and monitoring steps as outlined in Figure 1. The nursery operator should appreciate the significance of these decisions and make sure that the micropropagator has adopted the appropriate strategy for any given cultivar. These steps are discussed below.
Genetic selection. Genetic selection, allied to the cloning pathway chosen is of critical importance to the production of true-to-type progeny. Many
Author: Brian Howard, Tim Marks
PP: 247
When shoot culture in vitro was first recognized as a method for vegetative propagation there was a tendency to view it as a "stand alone" technique, not as one to integrate into general propagation.
There are various reasons for this. Tissue culture is a novel and highly technical process, requiring special and costly facilities more akin to a hospital than a nursery. It provided a wide range of research opportunities extending beyond plant propagation to plant improvement and was taken-up by specialist groups, often based in universities, some without contact with commercial horticulture. Initially, micropropagation was seen to have special opportunities, enabling the creation, maintenance, and exchange of healthy plant material for example.
The tendency to develop as a technology separate from the rest of propagation is only being eroded slowly. Of the 20 or so commercial tissue culture laboratories in England in 1986 concerned with vegetative propagation (as opposed to
Author: David Pennell
PP: 251
There is no doubt that amazing advances have been made since plant tissues were first cultured in vitro in the 1930's. Orchid propagation by both seed and meristem culture (mericloning) was an early use of these techniques. Florist crops and pot plants probably still account for the largest number of plants propagated in culture. Increasing use of micropropagation techniques is being made in hardy ornamental nursery stock and plantation crops with considerable effect being expended in investigations in micropropagation of forest species.
Currently at least 205 laboratories are in operation worldwide (3), but it is difficult to distinguish between production and research laboratories, making any realistic output estimate impossible. There are a number of units in operation or planned with a production capacity of 5 to 20 million plantlets. The theoretical capacity of a facility and what is actually produced are often widely different and the logistics of the very large
Author: S.A. Hunter
PP: 255
Plant cell and tissue culture technology has in recent years advanced so dramatically that today, not only does it serve as a research tool for plant scientists, but also has found a powerful niche in ornamental plant propagation. This technology had its origin in 1902 when Haberlandt postulated that if plant cells and tissues were excised and cultured on a nutrient medium under controlled environmental conditions, the phenomenon of cell totipotency should occur.
A number of major discoveries trace the development of plant tissue culture since then. It received a major stimulus when Morel (13) commercialized tissue culture of orchids. This encouraged scientists to explore its applicability for the propagation of diverse ornamental crops.
As a measure of its importance and significance in the nursery stock industry, the rate at which it is being adopted is indeed, remarkable. Reviewing the literature, one finds evidence of more than 50 plant genera presently being
Author: Adrian Bloom
PP: 262
Questions were asked like: Would it revolutionize propagation methods? Would it put the skilled propagator out of business? Would it make the rare plant common, bring down prices and flood the market?
At that time there was no way those questions could be answered. As a company we had to ask the question, "What was in it for Blooms?" Whether or not you like to face change and new technology, if you don't you will soon find
Author: Andy Kelly
PP: 266
In 1977, the staff at Rochfords Nurseries' Technical Department were examining methods of increasing the numbers of shoots on Dracaena marginata for propagation purposes. Various methods of introducing cytokinins into the plants were investigated but none resulted in substantial increases in shoot numbers. One method tried was injection of injection of cytokinin solutions into the stem at various points. The same treatment on Schefflera arboricola [syn. Heptaplurum arboricola]
Author: S.A. Hunter, N. O'Donnell
PP: 268
Author: James Mattock
PP: 272
- The main work area comprised of a laminar air flow unit, media preparation area, and sink,
- Growth room
- Changing room that doubles as an airlock avoiding direct introduction of air, dust, and people from the outside.
We decided to go for a purpose-built unit because we believe this will reduce the chances of cross contamination and help us run a small lab efficiently. This will leave us more time to consider plant growth problems and thus reduce the lag time between start up and full production which many labs have encountered.
At present Wyevale Nurseries produce 20 acres of field-grown stock and 1.7 million container plants. The lab was set up not so much to dramatically increase these figures, but
Author: John Jenkins
PP: 58
Author: Raymond J. Evison
PP: 274
C. cirrhosa, a species from southern Europe, was another early introduction to England. This quite variable species has given us several deep couloured forms, including a new one to be called C. cirrhosa ‘Freckles’.
In my collection there are not only new clematis of recent introduction, both small and large-flowered, but also old, large-flowered cultivars and species almost lost to commercial cultivation in Europe, as a result of changing fashions and trends.
Following is described a small selection from my collection, which numbers over 300 species and cultivars.
Clematis ‘Empress of India’ is a large-flowered cultivar brought back from the
Author: Robert Reid
PP: 277
Tasmania is a small island of slightly more than 64,000 square kilometres (roughly the size of Ireland), lying in the path of moisture laden westerly winds. On reaching the west coast these are forced up by the mountains (1200 to 1600m), thus depositing much of their moisture. There is a marked rainfall gradient from over 4000mm in the mountains of the west to 560mm on the east coast. Much of the landscape is dominated by rugged mountains and even today many areas have not been fully explored.
Altitude has a great influence on temperatures, with some coastal regions experiencing only light frosts. However above 1000m frost can be experienced at any time of the year and snow lies for long periods in the winter months. The vegetation of these high and cold regions is
Author: Kenneth N.E. Cox
PP: 280
Among the best known hybrids of this period, are ‘Cunningham's White’, ‘Gomer Waterer’, ‘Christmas Cheer’, ‘Purple Splendour’, and ‘Cynthia’. The next phase was marked by the introduction of more Himalayan species such as the enormous flowered R. griffithianum and later, the yellow species R. campylocarpum and R. wardii. In German and Dutch nurseries, breeding was being carried out from 1890 until World War II, with the Dutch hybrids such as ‘Britannia’, ‘Betty Wormald’ and ‘Kluis Sensation’ becoming popular wherever rhododendrons were grown.
The Edwardian and Georgian eras in Britain saw the hybridising
Author: John Addison
PP: 288
The genus Hebe belongs to the family Scrophulariaceae, and was once part of the genus Veronica which still contains the deciduous plants. The difference is that seed capsules of veronica split vertically and those of hebe horizontally. Hebes also have a larger number of chromosomes than veronicas. Parahebe, the other closely allied genus, is semi-woody in character. Most hebes come from New Zealand, although members of the genus also come from Australia, Tasmania, New Guinea, South America, and the Falkland Islands.
There are about a 100 species but they are a promiscuous lot and hybridise readily so there are as many as 200 cultivars.
As shrubs they are of great garden merit being outstanding flowering plants, most of which produce axilliary or terminal racemes of either white, pink, red, violet or blue flowers. The main flowering periods are May, June, July to September.
There is great diversity of foliage—many produce deep glossy green elliptical leaves, others produce
Author: Christopher Lloyd
PP: 292
In general, there are plenty of businessmen around in the nursery trade with a sensitive nose for ratings, but plantsmen are few and far between or, if present, uninfluential. A plantsman is always supposed to have his head in the air and to be blissfully unaware of market forces. Peter Catt, whom we met on his nursery during the conference tour, is exceptional in being a combined plantsman, propagator, and businessman. The result of having so few plantspeople either at the propagating end or the selling end of the production line is a dismal uniformity. The
Author: Norman S. Standbrook
PP: 295
The Moroccan broom, or Cytisus battandieri, with its pineapple scented flowers, is usually grown from seed, but this method is not really satisfactory as the plants do not flower until quite mature. Micropropagated plantlets are sometimes available, but there are still problems with successfully establishing the plantlets.
The best results are from cuttings which, although not easy, are a good source of supply. The wood must be semi-ripe and taken rather late in the year, October or November. Our greatest success has been from plants kept in a poly-tunnel and the growing shoots taken when about 10cm long and quite whippy to the feel. They are then dipped in Synergol rooting hormone, at the rate of one part to six of water and inserted into individual pots of Cornish grit/peat, 3:1.
The pots are then placed in a
Author: Peter J. Crosland
PP: 300
To obtain suitable propagation material papavers should be field-grown, not container-grown, as the restriction of root growth causes a more fibrous root system to be produced.
The stock plants are planted in May or June and left undisturbed, apart from keeping them weeded, until November or December. At this point they are carefully lifted from the ground using a normal garden fork so that the roots are not damaged. As the cuttings will not be inserted until February or March the roots must be stored, there are two ways this can be done:
- the complete plant is plunged in peat
- the roots needed are removed, laid in boxes and covered
Author: R.A.W. Lowe, G.A. Pattison
PP: 301
Work on the wild endangered flora of many countries is well underway, co-ordinated by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), but little or no work has been done on the garden plants of British Gardens. Some work has been done by Dr. E. C. Nelson on Irish garden plants and, in particular, cultivated plants.
The main aims of our organization are:
- to encourage the conservation of
Author: Neal Wright
PP: 304
Author: Keith Loach
PP: 308
- The need to conserve water in the plant tissues, since cuttings, whether from in vitro or conventional sources, readily suffer water deficits because they have no roots. In microplants already rooted in vitro, the roots often function poorly; their leaves, having developed in high humidities, have thin cuticles (1), little surface wax deposition (4), and relatively few stomata (5) with imperfect stomatal control (3).
- It is nevertheless important to avoid excessive wetting of the plant material. In the case of micropropagated plants, the weight of water droplets can be physically damaging. In conventional cuttings there is need to avoid waterlogging of the basal stem tissues, which occurs especially in winter conditions and results in rotting.
- Irradiance conditions must allow for the gradual redevelopment of
Author: D.O. Cliffe
PP: 63
This flat made its debut in 1978 and consisted of 200 cells of an inverted pyramid shape approximately 75 mm deep with a 25 mm opening.
Since that original concept, the name Speedling® has become synonomous with vegetable seedling raising in most of the developed countries of the world.
Whilst the nursery industry and, in particular, the conservative farming community, were slow to accept the principle of cell-raised plants it is now apparent, particularly in the U.S.A., that the system is well entrenched. Adaptations of the principle continue to be presented to the market in myriad form.
As what now seems to be a logical progression from the original concept of cell-grown vegetable transplants, there has been a
Author: Margaret A. Scott
PP: 315
A specialist ADAS micropropagation unit at Brogdale Experimental Horticulture Station in Kent is, in collaboration with Efford EHS, investigating factors involved in successful weaning-off and growing-on of micropropagated material.
Work so far has concentrated on relatively high value crops, particularly those in the Ericaceae group, most of which are suited to growing under protection thus capitalising on the potential for growth from micropropagated material, e.g. Rhododendron, deciduous Azalea, Pieris, Camellia, Kalmia, and Magnolia.
This paper reviews the larger scale weaning and growing-on work in progress at
Author: Terry C. Hatch
PP: 320
Selecting plants that would be saleable in our general area has been a highly personal choice with the tendency towards perennials, bulbs, and smaller shrubs, with the prerequisite of drought and wind tolerance. Many of these plants have quite a long nursery life before they are ready for sale; also quite a number have been fairly difficult to propagate in any quantity, i.e. Alstroemeria ‘Walter Fleming’, but growing them is a challenge and is rewarding, even if not over remunerative. Data on these plants, many of which are now rare, is not over-abundant and then often suitable only for United Kingdom conditions. Some of these
Author: Jennifer L. Oliphant
PP: 321
After preliminary stimulation on a medium containing full strength Murashige and Skoog minerals with 3 mg/l kinetin and 1 mg/l indoleacetic acid (IAA), shoot growth was best maintained on a medium containing 2 mg/l kinetin.
Shoot growth was dissected for further multiplication or transferred to a rooting medium containing half strength Murashige and Skoog minerals with 3 mg/l indolebutyric acid (IBA). The rooted plantlets were deflasked and gradually acclimatised to the greenhouse environment with a 98% success rate.
Author: Jennifer L. Oliphant
PP: 324
Author: Keith Hammett
PP: 326
As this breakthrough is very much in our area of activity it is essential that everyone involved in horticulture appreciates what is happening and understands the implications it has for New Zealand. I am referring to what is commonly termed "Biotechnology" or "Genetic Engineering".
The development of "improved&rquot; plants and animals has traditionally been severely restricted by a whole range of biological barriers, Even in cases where it has been possible to bypass a barrier the methods have usually taken a long time. Dr Legro's development of the red delphinium is a good example. This has taken the whole of his working lifetime.
In essence, biotechnology embraces a number of related disciplines that have reached a stage of development, and have come together, so that
Author: Mike Sheerin
PP: 329
My first comment relates to New Zealand's woody nursery production in relation to the rest of the world. I work for a large company and we grow a diverse range of woody plant material. Our domestic market is very small and our climatic advantages considerable. The countries into which we sell, mainly North America and Europe, conversely have large markets, producers grow a narrower range of material, and there are many different climatic zones within those areas. Many are efficient producers of large volumes. Growing a limited range they do not need large overheads to keep their production on the rails. My company is perhaps the largest of its type in the Southern Hemisphere, yet I have been
Author: John Joe Costin
PP: 335
The principle of the system is that water flows upwards from the water level into small soil spaces or pores by capillary attraction. The rise in water obtained increases as the size of pore decreases. There are a range of pore sizes in compost. The capillary rise will vary with these. The smaller spaces will be filled with water while air will
Author: Dennis M. Connor
PP: 338
Monrovia Nursery Company was founded in 1926 by Henry E. Rosedale on a ten acre site in Monrovia, California. In 1952 the nursery moved to Azusa to allow for expansion.
Today Monrovia Nursery produces 55 to 60 million plants annually on two 500 acre nurseries in Azusa, California and Dayton, Oregon. Both nursery sites have been selected because of their microclimate and the readily available source of high quality water. At each nursery fertiliser is put into the growing medium and this is supplemented by nutrients in the irrigation water, which is recycled. The water treatment plant adds fertilisers and herbicide to the water before it is reused. The health of plants is regularly monitored by the Research and Development Department.
The two different growing locations enables the Company to produce over 1200 plant cultivars and introduce over 150 new plant cultivars.
The majority of the production is outdoors but some five acres of greenhouses are used for tender plants such as
Author: Ralph Shugert
PP: 340
Jim used a formula as follows: If labor costs of the total personnel payroll are 50% of operating costs, the true cost of the operation is the sum spent in direct labor multiplied by four. As discussed at that meeting, and again in 1967, the formula rests on the premise of 50% labor costs in operating costs.
Zelenka Nursery Inc., located in Grand Haven, Michigan, USA uses a costing system based on man-hours. This system allows a production control process which enables them to record labor distribution by activity and simultaneously monitors efficiency. Flow charts to show costing at two departments, the greenhouse, and the
Author: Milton Schaefer
PP: 345
We use 6 guage, 6 in. concrete reinforcing wire, 6 ft wide, which is nailed to the wooden poles or crossties, to cover the beds and support the polyethylene. We use either a 2 ml clear polyethylene, which we cover with a 48% shade cloth, or a 2 ml white polyethylene, which has been manufactured to our specification so as to transmit approximately 50% light. We have constant water pressure to a solenoid valve, which is connected to a wiring system controlled by time clocks. We use ¾ in. 100 psi black poly-pipe with spaghetti tubes leading to nozzles. These lines are easy to work and afford
Author: Greg Lamont
PP: 67
Banks, on his return to England became Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and continued his efforts to introduce Australian plants, particularly with the assistance of collectors. A greenhouse known as the Botany Bay House was built to accommodate the living collections. Collectors such as Caley, the superintendent of the new Botanic Gardens at Parramatta gathered plants from the western parts of the Cumberland Plain and the Blue Mountains. Other notable collectors included Brown, Cunningham, and von Mueller in the east of Australia and Baxter, Drummond, and Molloy in the west.
Author: Kathleen Freeland
PP: 347
A number of nurseries in 1940 formed a group called the Ornamental Growers of Northern Illinois. The main market for these producers is landscape contractors, landscape architects, and other nurseries. This group has a high profile at public meetings and Trade Shows. The group is promoted through a newsletter and "The Plant Locator"—a list of plants and grades with nurseries able to supply.
There are 20 member nurseries growing trees, shrubs, and perennials on more than 4100 acres. Many of the nurseries in the group have been in the business for more than one generation but each nursery retains its own identity. Some members have introduced their own plants, while the group is working together with the Morton Arboretum and the Chicago Botanic Garden on a Plant Introduction Scheme modeled on the British Columbian Plant Introduction Scheme.
Author: Julie Martyn, Murray Hopping
PP: 347
Pollination is a vital factor in the successful production of kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa (A. Chev.)) C. F. Liang et A. R. Ferguson var. deliciosa. Pollen must be transferred from the anthers of the male flowers to the stigmas of the female flowers. This event is of particular importance to kiwifruit production because:
- The plant is dioecious, i.e., male and female flowers occur on separate vines.
- Fruit weight at harvest depends largely upon the number of seeds set (4), and seed number is influenced by the amount of pollen transferred.
At the Ruakura Agricultural Centre we have developed a method of optimising pollen transfer using spray pollination (6). As part of that project we have also identified certain male selections which have improved seed setting ability (7).
In this paper we follow the course of these males from initial selection through to commercialisation. We also look at the identification and propagation of these nominated selections.
Author: Michael Crooks
PP: 351
History has demonstrated that while this process of regulating pesticide availability to the market place has mostly met the aims of the legislators, exceptions have and will likely always occur. Knowledge is not finite and documented evidence will not necessarily always present all of the hard facts on which such judgements can be made. It is the purpose
Author: Hudson T. Hartmann
PP: 355
In the first place, we have added a new co-author to our book, Dr. Fred T. Davies, Jr. of Texas A & M University. Dr. Davies was president of the IPPS Southern Region in 1986.
Author: Michael Poynter
PP: 361
Skagit Gardens is a supplier of finished annuals and herbaceous perennials to retailers and smaller grades to other growers to grow and market. To offset the peak spring seasonal labour requirements other crops such as poinsettias and other propagated material are grown during the quieter times for sale in winter. This creates year round cash flow and reduces staff turnover. Producing quality plants and the ability to deliver when required are seen as important business objectives. Sales are achieved through buyers calling at the nursery and through brokers.
Mechanization is occurring in all aspects of the nursery as it becomes affordable and justified. Production scheduling is now done by computer using specially designed software; bedding plant seeds are sown mechanically and germinated in growing rooms, which saves 3 to 4 weeks production time. Different environments are used for germination, growing, and holding plants before shipping. By only offering propagated
Author: Peter E. Smale
PP: 362
Several attempts have been made at establishing a tea industry in New Zealand, the most definite of these having been in the north of the South Island. As far back as the 1920s Motueka farmers, in a bid to find new crops for the area, investigated tobacco and tea production. The last remaining tea bushes I believe were at Marahau on the coastal strip in the 1950s, while during that period tobacco production was approaching its peak of around 2000 hectares.
During the 1960s another attempt was made to establish tea production, this time on the west coast of the South Island, and trials were carried out on several sites. This attempt was based on seedling production and the remnants of that indicate the excessive variability of types that resulted. Failure was, I believe, as much due to apathy of the local farmers as anything else. There was support and encouragement from the local Public Relations Officer and help from some existing farmers who were mainly involved in
Author: Elton M. Smith
PP: 366
Weed competition has been estimated to cause an annual loss of over 3.5 billion dollars in yield and quantity of crops in the U.S. alone (1). In nursery research studies it has been reported that 624 man-hours are required to remove weeds from an acre of one gal. (3.78 liter) containers (approximately 30,000/A) (4). At a labor rate of 5.00/hr the cost to weed an acre could exceed $3,000.
Hebicides, indeed, can reduce these costs significantly. The herbicides, however, must be effective, non-phytotoxic, and environmentally safe.
To assist in this effort slow-release herbicides have been the focus of research at Ohio State University. Original research by Varma and Smith in Georgia (9) and subsequently Ohio (1,3,5,6,7,8) have
Author: Phil Gardner
PP: 369
Author: Graeme C. Platt
PP: 373
The inherent genetic diversity of every species makes it impossible to be precise. For example, to conclude that Pittosporum crassifolium seed germinates in three months is basically a sound assumption, because in most cases that is correct. However, we have had a couple of batches of seed that took 15 months. To state that you could obtain 6011/6 strike rate in Metrosideros excelsus cuttings by carrying out certain propagating procedures is only correct if you are referring to a specific cultivar or clone. I have discovered, to my cost, that
Author: Michael L. Dunnett
PP: 377
How long we have been reproducing plants? Man has been propagating plants which have fed him for many thousands of years. At first these were from seeds but as civilization became more sophisticated then propagation by vegative
Author: Robert Bolch
PP: 71
However ancient the practice, recent refinements are indicating that the technique will have realistic commercial viability. Etiolation is simply the growing of plants in the partial or total absence of light. Stock plant etiolation as a pretreatment to cutting propagation, generally refers to the initiation of new stock plant growth in the dark. These shoots are pale and succulent and they produce roots much more easily than do their counterparts grown in the light.
Banding is a pretreatment adjunct to etiolation, which excludes light from a zone of the cutting base.
Author: Sandra Van Der Mast
PP: 381
Where the fountain glistens sheenest,
Where the morning dew lies longest,
There the lady fern grows strongest.
Sir Walter Scott.
New Zealand ferns and their history. New Zealand is a country of ferns. We have acres and acres of ferns, lofty, graceful tree ferns, hanging ferns, climbing ferns, pellucent filmy ferns, and terrestrial ferns carpeting forest floors, and miles and miles of roadsides lined with Blechnum. There were no browsing animals in New Zealand before the arrival of man and our climate is conducive to the growth of ferns.
Ferns such as Marattia salicina (king fern) were cultivated in plots by the Maoris and their starchy rhizomes were used to provide food, while some ferns were collected and used for medicinal purposes; the unfurling croziers of Cyathea medullaris were used to sustain warriors and hunters alike. Everywhere cut fronds have been used for decoration and ferns have been immortalised in carvings.
Some reasons why more of our
Author: T.E. Welsh, J.A. Plummer, A.M. Armitage
PP: 384
New crops are currently under investigation at the New Zealand Nursery Research Centre at Massey University, Palmerston North. Crops selected for evaluation fall into three main categories: i) new cultivars from existing crops, ii) new uses for common species, and iii) plants taken from obscurity.
A systems approach to potplant evaluations in the new crops programme has been adopted to test various aspects of plant performance (1). The system acts to eliminate selections with obvious
Author: Cathy Jones, Dale Smith
PP: 389
Author: C.B. Christie, W. Brascamp
PP: 394
Author: John A. Wott
PP: 399
Author: Edwin S. Kubo
PP: 404
The Oki Nursery that we know today began in 1947 after Mr. Magoichi Oki and his two sons, Richard and George, returned from the Relocation Camp after World War II. As some of you may have heard, many Japanese families in the U.S. were interned in Relocation Camps during the war.
Being without adequate funding, it was very critical for the family to start a retail nursery immediately for quick cash flow and rely on the father's ability to produce fruit trees for a long term crop.
Shortly after, the sons found a nitch for re-wholesaling bedding plants bought in Southern California and resold in Sacramento. Before long, production of general ornamentals in containers began.
In 1956, the retail nursery was sold and all effort was placed on production for the needs of the wholesale customers.
With emphasis on specialization of general ornamentals
Author: Paul E. Read, Guochen Yang
PP: 406
Author: Sidney Meadows
PP: 410
Author: Bruce Macdonald
PP: 413
The University of British Columbia's Botanical Garden Plant Introduction Scheme (P.I.S.B.G.) issued its first three public releases in 1985. These were Genista pilosa ‘Vancouver Gold’, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi ‘Vancouver Jade’, and Microbiota decussata (UBC Clone #12701). Each of these plants has made a major contribution in stimulating plant production in the Province's wholesale production, as well as in retail and landscape sales. A further six releases have been introduced since 1985: Anagallis monelli ‘Pacific Blue’, Diascia rigescens, Ribes sanguineum ‘White Icicle’, Rubus calycinoides ‘Emerald Carpet’, Teucrium scorodonia ‘Crispum’ and Viburnum plicatum ‘Summer Snowflake’. To date, over two million plants in total have been produced of these nine introductions.
The objectives, formulation, and management of this introduction program have been described previously in the IPPS Proceedings (1, 2, 3).
Author: Robert D. Wright
PP: 417
The issue of groundwater pollution raises a