Is Micropropagation The Same As Tissue Culture?
Plant
clonal propagation in closed vessels under aseptic conditions is known as
micropropagation. The plants are cultivated in vitro, which means 'in glass,'
inside the containers, on culture media that contains nutrients and growth
regulators. Soil-grown plants, on the other hand, are referred to as in vivo.
Plants propagated in vitro are smaller than plants propagated in vivo, hence
the term "micropropagation." Rose varieties are clonally propagated
and so make good micropropagation candidates. The tissue culture technique of
micropropagation is utilized for the rapid vegetative replication of ornamental
plants and fruit trees. This tissue culture approach yields a number of plants.
Each of these plants will have the same genetic makeup as the original plant
from which it was developed. Well-rooted plants are taken from culture vessels
and transferred to hardening and eventual field transplantation in a controlled,
but the non-sterile environment.
Micropropagation
has the following advantages:
–
Rapid
plant multiplication in a short period of time and on a tiny scale;
–
Plants
are obtained under regulated conditions, regardless of the season.
– This
strategy is used to multiply sterile plants or plants that are unable to keep
their characteristics through sexual reproduction.
–
This
process multiplies rare and endangered plant species, allowing them to be
rescued.
– For
horticulture and agriculture, virus-free plants such as potatoes, sugarcane,
banana, and apple are grown.
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