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In vitro propagation of the gum arabic tree (Acacia Senegal (L.) Willd.) 1. Developing a rapid method for producing plants

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Abstract

The method described herein permitted production of three to four micropropagules of Acacia Senegal from one uninodal explant. The explants were taken from plants produced either in a sterile environment or during four years in a greenhouse. Zeatin or 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP) were mixed, at different concentrations, with Murashige and Skoog's medium (MS) of which the amount of macroelements was divided in half (MS mod.). At a concentration of 5.0×10−5 M, zeatin produced a better multiplication rate after 60 d for the two types of plant stock than did BAP. A two stage process was necessary to obtain a rooting rate of the small cuttings close to 100%. The first stage, called induction, consisted of leaving the cuttings for 6 to 12 d on a Jordan's medium (JN) of which the amount of macroelements was reduced by half (JN mod.) and in which NAA at a concentration of 5.0×10−5 M was added. The second stage, called root extension, required that the small cuttings be planted on this second hormone-free medium. Roots appeared after a few days. Acclimatization in a greenhouse occured with a survival rate of close to 100% when the rooted in vitro plants were transplanted to pots containing a mixture of vermiculite and top soil (1∶1; v/v).

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Abbreviations

BAP:

6-benzylaminopurine

NAA:

a-Naphthaleneacetic acid

JN:

Jordan et al. (1978) medium

MS:

Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium

mod:

modified

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Communicated by G.C. Phillips

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Badji, S., Mairone, Y., Ndiaye, I. et al. In vitro propagation of the gum arabic tree (Acacia Senegal (L.) Willd.) 1. Developing a rapid method for producing plants. Plant Cell Reports 12, 629–633 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00232813

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00232813

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