Propagation

Seed

v   Parentage of seeds

v   Seed should be adapted to nursery's market area

v   Germination requirements

v   Trueness to type

v   Seed stock plants

v   Collection and handling of seeds

 

Vegetative Source

v    Vegetative propagation = cloning

v    Collection of propagation material similar to seed collection

v    Propagation information (hardwood, softwood, leaf, root, air layers, division tissue culture, etc)

Grafting & Budding

v    Grafting usually done on dormant plants. Grafted plants often placed in cold storage for callus development then lined out in early spring.

v    Evergreens grafted in pots and cared for in greenhouses until callus development

v    Buds are done on growing or dormant plants. Done in the field in production areas.

 

Trade-offs

v   Vegetative propagation

v   Reduced juvenility

v   + Ornamental effects

v   Increased adaptation

v   Labor

v   Incompatibility

v   Weak unions

v   Longer production

v   - Ornamental effects

Propagation Comparison

v   Seed- inexpensive, cultivar issue, inability to propagate vegetatively

v   Cuttings- primary means of cultivar replication, relatively inexpensive, fast

v   Grafting/budding- when cuttings don’t work, ornamental effects, relatively expensive, fast

v   Tissue culture- rapid bulking, last resort, expensive

Small Plant Culture

v    Propagated materials placed into liner beds/rows, small containers/flats or immediately into production area

v    Small plant culture in liner areas is used to provide protection and optimum growing conditions for young, tender plants (hardening off)

v    2nd most intensively cultivated area after propagation areas. High investment in plants, labor, materials.

 

v    Narrow- and broad-leaved evergreens are usually placed into small plant culture before ultimate production area.

 

v    Only healthy, vigorous liners should be used in future production. Unhealthy plants should be discarded.

 

General Fertilization Program

v    Ground Beds- May be fertilized once/year or split fertilizations (2-4 times/year).

v    pH 6.0-6.5 for most plants

v    Deciduous trees and shrubs: 5-6 lbs N/1000 sq. ft./year

v    Narrow-leaved evergreens 4-5 lbs N/1000 sq. ft./year

v    Broad-leaved evergreens 2-3 lbs N/1000 sq. ft./year

General Fertilization Program

v    Containers (pots or flats)- Small container volume, large irrigation volume (=high leaching) and low cation exchange capacities result in need for more frequent fertilization than ground beds.

v    Slow release fertilizer at manufacturers recommendation

v    Slow release + soluble fertilizer at 150 ppm N/week

v    Soluble fertilizer at 250-300 ppm N/week.

Transplanting

v   Fall vs Spring planting

v   Protect transplants from desiccation

   Puddling, misting, Water buckets, Moist material

v   Bare root vs container transplants

v   By hand or mechanical

 

v  First year care most critical

v  Irrigation

  Solid set (portable pipe) vs drip vs travelling gun

“Growing on”

v   Common Culture- irrigation, fertilization, pest control & pruning will discuss separately

Root Pruning

v  When?

  During slow canopy growth- usually Fall

  2nd year for fast growing shrubs on 3-4 year production cycle

  Every 3-4 years for trees

  Year 1 or 2 for plants that develop tap roots

Alternatives to Root Pruning

v   Water

v   Fertilizer

v   Sod/grass alleys

v   Root control bags

Harvesting

v  Bare root

v  Balled and burlapped

v  Balled and potted (Containerized)

v  Balled and bagged