Root Formation by Detached White Mustard (Sinapis alba) Cotyledons
- 1 May 1969
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Physiologia Plantarum
- Vol. 22 (5) , 937-944
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3054.1969.tb07452.x
Abstract
Rooting is shown to occur in excised cotyledons of Sinapis alba when grown in petri dishes on moist filter paper. Cotyledons were excised at intervals from 6 hours after the start of imbibition, when they were yellow, unexpanded and enclosed within the testa, to 27 days after sowing when the cotyledons were green and fully expanded and on plants possessing up to 3 foliage leaves. Rooting generally began 5 or 6 days after excision and was completed dining the following 5 days. The age of cotyledons at t ho time of excision had three effects on rooting: the lag period be‐fore rooting began and the period during which rooting took place both increased with age: but the most marked effect was on the total number of cotyledons which were able to form roots, which increased until cotyledon expansion was almost complete, then decreased as the mature cotyledons became older. Optimal rooting was shown by cotyledons detached 8 days alter sowing, when they were half expanded. At this age S5 % of them formed roots between 6 days and 8 days after excision.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- PROTEIN METABOLISM IN ROOTED RUNNER‐BEAN LEAVESNew Phytologist, 1954
- Factors concerned in the Rooting Responses of Isolated LeavesJournal of Experimental Botany, 1950
- Regeneration in Mutilated SeedlingsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1933