Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates

ABSTRACT: The commercial propagation of rose bushes is carried out asexually by the cutting method. The genetic material and the substrate are factors that interfere in the rhizogenic process of the cuttings. Thus, the aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of the substrate on the rooting of cuttings of two hybrid rose bushes. Floriferous branches of matrix plants were cut at the apex and at the base, approximately 8cm long and with two buds, and the basal leaf was removed. The experimental design was completely randomized, in a 2 × 3 factorial scheme (two cultivars, Tineke and Natal Briar × three substrates, carbonized rice husk, coconut fiber and TN Gold®) containing four replicates of 15 cuttings per replicate. The base of the cuttings was immersed for five seconds in IBA 2000mg L-1 solution (indole butyric acid). The cuttings were placed in trays with 24 cells previously filled with substrate and deposited on the floor in a transparent plastic tunnel, built inside a stove. After the 50-day experiment, rootstocks (%), sprouts (%) and dead (%), root length (cm), fresh and dry shoot biomass and roots (g) were evaluated. The rooting percentage of the Natal Briar cultivar was 75%, thus superior to the Tineke cultivar, which had a rooting percentage of 39%. The best substrates for the Tineke and Natal Briar rose cuttings are CAC and coconut fiber, which provided rooting percentages of 81% and 67% of the cuttings, respectively.

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Main Authors: Ritter,Giovana, Hojo,Ellen Toews Doll, Villa,Fabíola, Silva,Daniel Fernandes da
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Maria 2018
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-84782018000800402
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spelling oai:scielo:S0103-847820180008004022018-07-18Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substratesRitter,GiovanaHojo,Ellen Toews DollVilla,FabíolaSilva,Daniel Fernandes da Rose sp. asexual propagation cutting plant regulator. ABSTRACT: The commercial propagation of rose bushes is carried out asexually by the cutting method. The genetic material and the substrate are factors that interfere in the rhizogenic process of the cuttings. Thus, the aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of the substrate on the rooting of cuttings of two hybrid rose bushes. Floriferous branches of matrix plants were cut at the apex and at the base, approximately 8cm long and with two buds, and the basal leaf was removed. The experimental design was completely randomized, in a 2 × 3 factorial scheme (two cultivars, Tineke and Natal Briar × three substrates, carbonized rice husk, coconut fiber and TN Gold®) containing four replicates of 15 cuttings per replicate. The base of the cuttings was immersed for five seconds in IBA 2000mg L-1 solution (indole butyric acid). The cuttings were placed in trays with 24 cells previously filled with substrate and deposited on the floor in a transparent plastic tunnel, built inside a stove. After the 50-day experiment, rootstocks (%), sprouts (%) and dead (%), root length (cm), fresh and dry shoot biomass and roots (g) were evaluated. The rooting percentage of the Natal Briar cultivar was 75%, thus superior to the Tineke cultivar, which had a rooting percentage of 39%. The best substrates for the Tineke and Natal Briar rose cuttings are CAC and coconut fiber, which provided rooting percentages of 81% and 67% of the cuttings, respectively.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidade Federal de Santa MariaCiência Rural v.48 n.8 20182018-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-84782018000800402en10.1590/0103-8478cr20180117
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Ritter,Giovana
Hojo,Ellen Toews Doll
Villa,Fabíola
Silva,Daniel Fernandes da
spellingShingle Ritter,Giovana
Hojo,Ellen Toews Doll
Villa,Fabíola
Silva,Daniel Fernandes da
Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
author_facet Ritter,Giovana
Hojo,Ellen Toews Doll
Villa,Fabíola
Silva,Daniel Fernandes da
author_sort Ritter,Giovana
title Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
title_short Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
title_full Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
title_fullStr Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
title_full_unstemmed Rooting of Tineke and Natal Briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
title_sort rooting of tineke and natal briar rose stem cuttings in different substrates
description ABSTRACT: The commercial propagation of rose bushes is carried out asexually by the cutting method. The genetic material and the substrate are factors that interfere in the rhizogenic process of the cuttings. Thus, the aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of the substrate on the rooting of cuttings of two hybrid rose bushes. Floriferous branches of matrix plants were cut at the apex and at the base, approximately 8cm long and with two buds, and the basal leaf was removed. The experimental design was completely randomized, in a 2 × 3 factorial scheme (two cultivars, Tineke and Natal Briar × three substrates, carbonized rice husk, coconut fiber and TN Gold®) containing four replicates of 15 cuttings per replicate. The base of the cuttings was immersed for five seconds in IBA 2000mg L-1 solution (indole butyric acid). The cuttings were placed in trays with 24 cells previously filled with substrate and deposited on the floor in a transparent plastic tunnel, built inside a stove. After the 50-day experiment, rootstocks (%), sprouts (%) and dead (%), root length (cm), fresh and dry shoot biomass and roots (g) were evaluated. The rooting percentage of the Natal Briar cultivar was 75%, thus superior to the Tineke cultivar, which had a rooting percentage of 39%. The best substrates for the Tineke and Natal Briar rose cuttings are CAC and coconut fiber, which provided rooting percentages of 81% and 67% of the cuttings, respectively.
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
publishDate 2018
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-84782018000800402
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