Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin

Production of passion fruit (Passiflora sp.) via cuttings is a way to eliminate genetic variation in the crop and also results in a faster establishment time. This could aid producers in increasing production efficiency while maintaining genetic lines. The objective of this research was to evaluate...

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Main Authors: Jenny B. Ryals, Patricia R. Knight, Eric T. Stafne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) 2020-10-01
Series:HortTechnology
Subjects:
iba
naa
Online Access:https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/30/6/article-p692.xml
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spelling doaj-a21ab7e52aca405780db76d9e6ed2bba2020-12-28T17:40:23ZengAmerican Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)HortTechnology1943-77142020-10-01306692696https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTTECH04660-20Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of AuxinJenny B. RyalsPatricia R. KnightEric T. StafneProduction of passion fruit (Passiflora sp.) via cuttings is a way to eliminate genetic variation in the crop and also results in a faster establishment time. This could aid producers in increasing production efficiency while maintaining genetic lines. The objective of this research was to evaluate ease of rooting and determine the optimal auxin source for seven species of passion fruit. Semihardwood two-node cuttings were taken from the middle of the parent vine, and auxin treatments were applied to the basal end of the cutting. The cuttings were then stuck to a depth of 1 inch on 20 Aug. 2019. Treatments included three auxin sources and seven passion fruit species. Treatments were set up as a randomized complete block design blocking on species, with 10 single-plant replications per treatment. Data were collected 30 d after sticking cuttings and included percent rooted, total root number, average root length (of the three longest roots, measured in centimeters), root quality (0–5 scale, with 0 = dead and 5 = healthy, vigorous root system), root dry weight (measured in grams), and percent callus. Results showed that passion fruit cuttings receiving a hormone treatment had significantly positive effects on rooting responses, such as increased number, length, quality, and dry weight of roots. Blue passionflower (P. caerulea) was the only species in which hormone treatment did not increase rooting compared with the control. The use of hormone to aid in cutting propagation of passion fruit is recommended, depending on the species being propagated.https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/30/6/article-p692.xml1-naphthaleneacetic acidcuttingsibaindole-3-butyric acidk-naanaapassiflorapropagationsemihardwood
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenny B. Ryals
Patricia R. Knight
Eric T. Stafne
spellingShingle Jenny B. Ryals
Patricia R. Knight
Eric T. Stafne
Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
HortTechnology
1-naphthaleneacetic acid
cuttings
iba
indole-3-butyric acid
k-naa
naa
passiflora
propagation
semihardwood
author_facet Jenny B. Ryals
Patricia R. Knight
Eric T. Stafne
author_sort Jenny B. Ryals
title Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
title_short Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
title_full Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
title_fullStr Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
title_full_unstemmed Rooting Response of Seven Passion Fruit Species to Basal Application of Auxin
title_sort rooting response of seven passion fruit species to basal application of auxin
publisher American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)
series HortTechnology
issn 1943-7714
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Production of passion fruit (Passiflora sp.) via cuttings is a way to eliminate genetic variation in the crop and also results in a faster establishment time. This could aid producers in increasing production efficiency while maintaining genetic lines. The objective of this research was to evaluate ease of rooting and determine the optimal auxin source for seven species of passion fruit. Semihardwood two-node cuttings were taken from the middle of the parent vine, and auxin treatments were applied to the basal end of the cutting. The cuttings were then stuck to a depth of 1 inch on 20 Aug. 2019. Treatments included three auxin sources and seven passion fruit species. Treatments were set up as a randomized complete block design blocking on species, with 10 single-plant replications per treatment. Data were collected 30 d after sticking cuttings and included percent rooted, total root number, average root length (of the three longest roots, measured in centimeters), root quality (0–5 scale, with 0 = dead and 5 = healthy, vigorous root system), root dry weight (measured in grams), and percent callus. Results showed that passion fruit cuttings receiving a hormone treatment had significantly positive effects on rooting responses, such as increased number, length, quality, and dry weight of roots. Blue passionflower (P. caerulea) was the only species in which hormone treatment did not increase rooting compared with the control. The use of hormone to aid in cutting propagation of passion fruit is recommended, depending on the species being propagated.
topic 1-naphthaleneacetic acid
cuttings
iba
indole-3-butyric acid
k-naa
naa
passiflora
propagation
semihardwood
url https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/30/6/article-p692.xml
work_keys_str_mv AT jennybryals rootingresponseofsevenpassionfruitspeciestobasalapplicationofauxin
AT patriciarknight rootingresponseofsevenpassionfruitspeciestobasalapplicationofauxin
AT erictstafne rootingresponseofsevenpassionfruitspeciestobasalapplicationofauxin
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