A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon

Simple in vitro techniques were developed for collecting Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon to obviate deterioration, quarantine and bulk problems of conventional methods for collecting vegetative material. Various antimicrobial agents were tested for effective surface- sterilisation of plant material and for supplementing the growth medium to reduce microbial contamination. Halazon tablets were used for surface-sterilisation and a combination of Rifamycine and Benlate was the most effective medium supplement. This technique was found useful for the field collection of vegetative germplasm of the 2 species. In field trials, 75% of D. eriantha spp. pentzii and C. dactylon cultures were aseptic and growing after 4 weeks in culture. The cultures were transferred to natural conditions in soil and approximately 70% of the 2 species were recovered as potted plants. In a field trial with C. dactylon, 92% of the cultures which had formed roots and 80% of the cultures which had no roots at the time of transfer to soil were successfully established as potted plants.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ruredzo, T.J.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1991
Subjects:feeds, livestock, animal feeding,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27929
http://www.tropicalgrasslands.asn.au/Tropical%20Grasslands%20Journal%20archive/Abstracts/Vol_25_1991/Abs_25_01_91_pp56_63.html
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-279292023-05-29T13:04:59Z A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon Ruredzo, T.J. feeds livestock animal feeding Simple in vitro techniques were developed for collecting Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon to obviate deterioration, quarantine and bulk problems of conventional methods for collecting vegetative material. Various antimicrobial agents were tested for effective surface- sterilisation of plant material and for supplementing the growth medium to reduce microbial contamination. Halazon tablets were used for surface-sterilisation and a combination of Rifamycine and Benlate was the most effective medium supplement. This technique was found useful for the field collection of vegetative germplasm of the 2 species. In field trials, 75% of D. eriantha spp. pentzii and C. dactylon cultures were aseptic and growing after 4 weeks in culture. The cultures were transferred to natural conditions in soil and approximately 70% of the 2 species were recovered as potted plants. In a field trial with C. dactylon, 92% of the cultures which had formed roots and 80% of the cultures which had no roots at the time of transfer to soil were successfully established as potted plants. 1991 2013-04-22T08:15:36Z 2013-04-22T08:15:36Z Journal Article Tropical Grasslands;25(1): 56-63 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27929 http://www.tropicalgrasslands.asn.au/Tropical%20Grasslands%20Journal%20archive/Abstracts/Vol_25_1991/Abs_25_01_91_pp56_63.html en Open Access p. 56-63 application/pdf Tropical Grasslands
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic feeds
livestock
animal feeding
feeds
livestock
animal feeding
spellingShingle feeds
livestock
animal feeding
feeds
livestock
animal feeding
Ruredzo, T.J.
A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
description Simple in vitro techniques were developed for collecting Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon to obviate deterioration, quarantine and bulk problems of conventional methods for collecting vegetative material. Various antimicrobial agents were tested for effective surface- sterilisation of plant material and for supplementing the growth medium to reduce microbial contamination. Halazon tablets were used for surface-sterilisation and a combination of Rifamycine and Benlate was the most effective medium supplement. This technique was found useful for the field collection of vegetative germplasm of the 2 species. In field trials, 75% of D. eriantha spp. pentzii and C. dactylon cultures were aseptic and growing after 4 weeks in culture. The cultures were transferred to natural conditions in soil and approximately 70% of the 2 species were recovered as potted plants. In a field trial with C. dactylon, 92% of the cultures which had formed roots and 80% of the cultures which had no roots at the time of transfer to soil were successfully established as potted plants.
format Journal Article
topic_facet feeds
livestock
animal feeding
author Ruredzo, T.J.
author_facet Ruredzo, T.J.
author_sort Ruredzo, T.J.
title A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
title_short A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
title_full A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
title_fullStr A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
title_full_unstemmed A minimum facility method for in vitro collection of Digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and Cynodon dactylon
title_sort minimum facility method for in vitro collection of digitaria eriantha ssp. pentzii and cynodon dactylon
publishDate 1991
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27929
http://www.tropicalgrasslands.asn.au/Tropical%20Grasslands%20Journal%20archive/Abstracts/Vol_25_1991/Abs_25_01_91_pp56_63.html
work_keys_str_mv AT ruredzotj aminimumfacilitymethodforinvitrocollectionofdigitariaerianthassppentziiandcynodondactylon
AT ruredzotj minimumfacilitymethodforinvitrocollectionofdigitariaerianthassppentziiandcynodondactylon
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