Vegetative Propagation of Houseplants
Many people have discovered how easy it can be to propagate new
houseplants.
In
nature, plants propagate themselves in two ways sexually
(by seed) and vegetatively (using a part of the original plant,
such as an offset or plantlet). Since most houseplants are herbaceous
perennials, shrubs or trees, raising them from seed is not practical.
It takes too long and the offspring may not have the same characteristics
as the parent plant.
Vegetative propagation results in a new plant that is genetically
identical to the parent plant (a clone). This is possible because
many plants can regenerate missing parts. However, not all plants
have equal abilities. Some plants will produce roots from a leaf
cutting, but fail to produce new stems and leaves.
Plants can be reproduced by cuttings, division, layering, and by
using specialized plant structures such as runners and offsets.
Many plants can be propagated by more than one of these methods.
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