Abstract
In vitro bulblet formation and subsequent transplanting of bulblets to soil were studied in order to develop a cost-effective method for the mass production of three Lachenalia varieties. Clumps of adventitious shoots regenerated from leaf explants were used. Bulblet formation was initiated after 2 weeks when shoots were subjected to low temperature (4–15 °C). The size (age) of the adventitious shoot affected the bulblet size, and shoots shorter than 4 mm did not form bulblets. Larger bulblets formed on medium containing 6% sucrose compared to 3% sucrose. Following bulblet initiation, illumination was not necessary for the completion of bulblet formation. Bulblets went into dormancy 3–4 months after they had been initiated or when the culture medium dried out, and they were released from dormancy when the natural night temperatures started to decrease in the late summer. The survival rate of the bulblets after transplanting was directly correlated to the size of the bulblets.The most important factors influencing in vitro bulblet formation of Lachenalia were sucrose concentration, temperature and length of explant shoots.
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Received: 12 June 1998 / Revision received: 8 September 1998 / Accepted: 23 September 1998
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Slabbert, M., Niederwieser, J. In vitro bulblet production of Lachenalia. Plant Cell Reports 18, 620–624 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002990050632
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002990050632