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3Q SCI6 Vegetative Propagation
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Involves bending the shoot of the parent plant until it is covered with soil. Shoots will grow from here and develop roots
Layering
Propagation where healthy plant is cut and placed in water until roots grow so they can be replanted
Cutting
The rooted part of another plant in grafting
Stock
Upper part in grafting that is attached to the rooted part of another plant
Scion
Uses two plants to grow a new plant
Grafting
3 common methods of Artificial Vegetative Propagation
Cutting, grafting, layering
Growing plants from other plant parts with human intervention
Artificial Vegetative Propagation
Thick, rounded underground stems with scaly leaves and example
Corm, such as gabi
Stems that grow horizontally above the ground and example
Rhizomes, such as the ginger
Examples of tubers
Potato, dahlia
Their leaves and buds are attached to the stem, leaves store food while new plants shoot from the buds
Bulb
Swollen underground stem and examples
Bulb. Examples of bulbs are garlic, tulips, and lilies.
Examples of plants with swollen roots
Radish, carrots, turnips
Part of plant that usually stores water but can also function as food storage for the plant
Swollen roots
Common example of plant that propagates using its leaves
Katakataka
Place where plantlets or small plants grow from
Edge of leaves
Grow horizontally above the ground and have nodes where buds are formed and their examples
Runners or stalons. Examples are strawberry and Bermuda grass
This uses other parts of plants, aside from seeds and spores to  grow new plants without human effort.
Natural Vegetative Propagation
True or False: In Vegetative Propagation may only be done naturally.
FALSE. Vegetative Propagation may be done naturally or artificially.
True or False: In Vegetative Propagation, new plants are grown from seeds or spores.
FALSE. Vegetative Propagation utilizes buds, stems, roots, leaves.
Parts of plants utilized in Vegetative Propagation
Buds, stems, roots, leaves.
True or False: In Vegetative Propagation, new plants grow from the parent plant.
TRUE. New plants grow from the parent plant in In vegetative propagation.
Form of reproduction of vegetative propagation
Asexual reproduction
Type of plant reproduction that uses parts of plants--buds, stems, roots, leaves---instead of seeds.
Vegetative Propagation