Plant Teknik
Plant Teknik
Plant Teknik
TECHNIQUES
P L A N T P R O PA G AT I O N
TABLE OF CONTENT
• Introduction
• Definition of stem cutting
• Cutting : softwood
• Root cutting
• Cutting : hardwood
• Leaf cutting
• Leaf – bud cutting
• Conclusion
INTRODUCTION
CUTTING :
SOFTWOOD
Softwood cuttings can be
used to propagate a wide
range of perennials
and deciduous shrubs, as
well as some trees, in spring
and early summer. Material
is taken from the soft and
flexible young shoot tips,
which root readily.
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ROOT CUTTING
-Roots of young stock plants (juvenile)
-Taken during winter and early spring
before new growth starts
carbohydrates stored in root essential
-Stick root cuttings with the proximal end upward
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CUTTING :
HARDWOOD
Hardwood cuttings provide
an easy and reliable method
of propagating a range of
deciduous climbers, trees
and shrubs, and as bonus,
they are taken from mid-
autumn until late winter
when more time is usually
available to the gardener.
Some evergreen plants,
hollies for example, can also
be taken at the same time of
year as other hardwood
cuttings.
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LEAF CUTTINGS
L EA F- BUD
CUTTINGS
-Consists of a leaf blade,
petiole, an axillary bud on a
node
-Single-eye or
double-eye nodal cuttings
• plantation is a large-scale farm that specializes in cash crops. The crops grown include cotton, coffee, tea
, cocoa, sugar cane, sisal, oil seeds, oil palms, rubber trees, and fruits. Protectionist policies and natural
comparative advantage have sometimes contributed to determining where plantations were located.
• A plantation house is the main house of a plantation, often a substantial farmhouse, which often serves as
a symbol for the plantation as a whole. Plantation houses in the Southern United States and in other areas
were often quite grand and expensive architectural works.
• Among the earliest examples of plantations were the latifundia of the Roman Empire, which produced large
quantities of wine and olive oil for export. Plantation agriculture grew rapidly with the increase in
international trade and the development of a worldwide economy that followed the expansion of
European colonial empires. Like every economic activity, it has changed over time. Earlier forms of
plantation agriculture were associated with large disparities of wealth and income, foreign ownership and
political influence, and exploitative social systems such as indentured labor and slavery.
•