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fruit tree propagation

A Wisdom Archive on fruit tree propagation

fruit tree propagation

A selection of articles related to fruit tree propagation

We recommend this article: fruit tree propagation - 1, and also this: fruit tree propagation - 2.
Fruit tree propagation

ARTICLES RELATED TO fruit tree propagation

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Budding - In Horticulture

Budding is also a process that consist of ingrafting the bud of a plant into another plant. This is a frequent technique for fruit trees (see fruit tree propagation), but can also be used for many other kinds of nursery stock. An extremely sharp knife is necessary; specialty budding knives are on the market. The rootstock or stock plant may be cut off above the bud at budding, or one may wait u ...

See also:

Budding, Budding - General biological meaning, Budding - In Virology, Budding - In Embryology, Budding - In Horticulture, Budding - External link

Read more here: » Budding: Encyclopedia II - Budding - In Horticulture

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Botanical origins

The wild ancestor of Malus domestica is Malus sieversii. It has no common name in English, but is known where it is native as "alma"; in fact, the city where it is thought to originate is called Alma-Ata, or "father of the apples". This tree is still found wild in the mountains of Central Asia in southern Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Xinjiang, China. Some individual M. sieversii, planted by the US government at a research facility recently, resist many diseases and pests that affect domestic apples, and research with it to develop ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Botanical origins

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Apple breeding. Like most perennial fruits, apples are ordinarily propagated asexually by grafting. Seedling apples are different from their parents, sometimes radically. Most new apple cultivars originate as seedlings, which either arise by chance or are bred by deliberately crossing cultivars with promising characteristics. The words seedling, pippin, and kernel in the name of an apple cultivar suggest that it originated as a seedling. Apples can also form bud sports (mutations on a ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

Apple - Apple breeding. Like most perennial fruits, apples are ordinarily propagated asexually by grafting. Seedling apples are different from their parents, sometimes radically. Most new apple cultivars originate as seedlings, which either arise by chance or are bred by deliberately crossing cultivars with promising characteristics. The words seedling, pippin, and kernel in the name of an apple cultivar suggest that it originated as a seedling. Apples can also form bud sports (mutations on a ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Growing apples

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Commerce and uses

45 million metric tons of apples were grown worldwide in 2002, with a value of about 10 billion USD. China produced almost half of this total. Argentina is the second leading producer, with more than 15% of the world production. The United States is the third leading producer, accounting for 7.5% of world production. Turkey is also a leading producer. France, Italy, South Africa and Chile are among the leading apple exporters. In the United States, more than 60% of all the apples sold commercially are grown in Washington state. Imported apples from New Zealand and other more temperate areas are competing w ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Commerce and uses

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Commerce and uses

45 million metric tons of apples were grown worldwide in 2002, with a value of about 10 billion USD. China produced almost half of this total. Argentina is the second leading producer, with more than 15% of the world production. The United States is the third leading producer, accounting for 7.5% of world production. Turkey is also a leading producer. France, Italy, South Africa and Chile are among the leading apple exporters. In the United States, more than 60% of all the apples sold commercially are grown in Washington state. Imported apples from New Zealand and other more temperate areas are competing w ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Commerce and uses

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Health benefits

Apples have long been considered healthy, as indicated by the proverb an apple a day keeps the doctor away. Research suggests that apples may reduce the risk of colon cancer, prostate cancer and lung cancer. They may also help with heart disease, weight loss and controlling cholesterol. A group of chemicals in apples could protect the brain from the type of damage that triggers such neurodegenerative diseases as Alzheimer's and Parkinsonism. Chang Y. "Cy" Lee of Cornell University found that the apple phenolics, which are natur ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Health benefits

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Health benefits

Apples have long been considered healthy, as indicated by the proverb an apple a day keeps the doctor away. Research suggests that apples may reduce the risk of colon cancer, prostate cancer and lung cancer. They may also help with heart disease, weight loss and controlling cholesterol. A group of chemicals in apples could protect the brain from the type of damage that triggers such neurodegenerative diseases as Alzheimer's and Parkinsonism. Chang Y. "Cy" Lee of Cornell University found that the apple phenolics, which are natur ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Health benefits

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Cultural aspects

Apples appear in many religious traditions, often as a mystical and forbidden fruit. One of the Greek hero Heracles' Twelve Labours was to travel to the Garden of the Hesperides and pick the golden apples off the Tree of Life growing at its center. In Norse mythology, Iðunn was the keeper of the 'apples of immortality' which kept the Gods young. The 'fruit-bearing tree' referred to by Tacitus in his description of Norse runic divination may have been the apple, or the rowan. This tradition is also reflected in the book of Genesis. Th ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Cultural aspects

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Apple cultivars

There are more than 7,500 known cultivars of apples. Different cultivars are available for temperate and subtropical climates. Apples do not flower in tropical climates because they have a chilling requirement. Commercially-popular apple cultivars are soft but crisp. Other desired qualities in modern commercial apple breeding are a colourful skin, absence of russeting, ease of shipping, lengthy storage ability, high yields, disease resistance, typical 'Red D ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Apple cultivars

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Apple cultivars

There are more than 7,500 known cultivars of apples. Different cultivars are available for temperate and subtropical climates. Apples do not flower in tropical climates because they have a chilling requirement. Commercially-popular apple cultivars are soft but crisp. Other desired qualities in modern commercial apple breeding are a colourful skin, absence of russeting, ease of shipping, lengthy storage ability, high yields, disease resistance, typical 'Red D ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Apple cultivars

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Cultural aspects

Apple - Apples as symbols. Apples appear in many religious traditions, often as a mystical and forbidden fruit. One of the Greek hero Heracles' Twelve Labours was to travel to the Garden of the Hesperides and pick the golden apples off the Tree of Life growing at its center. In Norse mythology, Iðunn was the keeper of the 'apples of immortality' which kept the Gods young. The 'fruit-bearing tree' referred to by Tacitus in his description of Norse runic divination may have been the apple, or the rowan. This tradi ...

See also:

Apple, Apple - Botanical origins, Apple - Apple cultivars, Apple - Growing apples, Apple - Apple breeding, Apple - Starting an orchard, Apple - Location, Apple - Pollination, Apple - Thinning, Apple - Pests and diseases, Apple - Harvest, Apple - Commerce and uses, Apple - Health benefits, Apple - Cultural aspects, Apple - Apples as symbols, Apple - Traditions

Read more here: » Apple: Encyclopedia II - Apple - Cultural aspects

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Kumquat - Cultivation and uses

Kumquats are cultivated in China, Southeast Asia, Japan, Europe (notably Corfu, Greece), and the southern United States (notably Florida). Kumquat - Climate. They are much hardier than citrus plants such as oranges. The 'Nagami' kumquat requires a hot summer, ranging from 25 ºC to 38º C, but can withstand frost down to about −10 °C without injury. It grows in the tea regions of China where the climate is too cold for other citrus fruits, even the Satsuma orange. The trees differ also from other Citrus ...

See also:

Kumquat, Kumquat - Cultivation and uses, Kumquat - Climate, Kumquat - Propagation, Kumquat - Uses, Kumquat - Etymology

Read more here: » Kumquat: Encyclopedia II - Kumquat - Cultivation and uses

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools

Cultivation; Spade Fork Hoe Trowel Kirpi Lawncare Lawnmower Pruning and tree care; Secatuers Pruning saw Bow saw ...

See also:

List of organic gardening and farming topics, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Soil, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Soil fertility, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Techniques, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Propagation, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Wildlife in the garden, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Crops, List of organic gardening and farming topics - The ornamental organic garden, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Pests and diseases, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Weeds, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Organic organisations, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Some important figures in the organic gardening movement, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Related lists

Read more here: » List of organic gardening and farming topics: Encyclopedia II - List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools

Cultivation; Spade Fork Hoe Trowel Kirpi Lawncare Lawnmower Pruning and tree care; Secatuers Pruning saw Bow saw ...

See also:

List of organic gardening and farming topics, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Soil, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Soil fertility, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Techniques, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Propagation, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Wildlife in the garden, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Crops, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Organic farming and gardening systems and approaches, List of organic gardening and farming topics - The ornamental organic garden, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Pests and diseases, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Weeds, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Organic organisations, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Some important figures in organic farming and gardening, List of organic gardening and farming topics - Related lists

Read more here: » List of organic gardening and farming topics: Encyclopedia II - List of organic gardening and farming topics - Tools

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Breadfruit - Uses

Breadfruit is a staple food in many tropical regions. They were propagated far outside their native range by Polynesian voyagers who transported root cuttings and air-layered plants over long ocean distances. They are very rich in starch, and before being eaten they are roasted, baked, fried or boiled. When cooked the taste is described as potato-like, or similar to fresh baked bread (whence the name). Because breadfruit trees usually produce large crops at certain times of the year, preservation is an issue. One traditional preservat ...

See also:

Breadfruit, Breadfruit - Uses, Breadfruit - Reference

Read more here: » Breadfruit: Encyclopedia II - Breadfruit - Uses

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Pawpaw - Cultivation

Although it is a delicious and nutritious fruit, it has never been cultivated on the scale of apples and peaches, primarily because it does not store or ship well. It is also difficult to transplant due to its long taproot. Cultivars are propagated by chip budding or whip grafting. In recent years the pawpaw has attracted renewed interest, particularly among organic growers, as a native fruit which has few pests, and which therefore requires little pesticide use for cultivation. The shipping and storage problem has largely been addressed by pu ...

See also:

Pawpaw, Pawpaw - Species, Pawpaw - Cultivation, Pawpaw - History, Pawpaw - Medicinal properties

Read more here: » Pawpaw: Encyclopedia II - Pawpaw - Cultivation

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Black pepper - The pepper plant

The pepper plant is a perennial woody vine growing to four metres in height on supporting trees, poles, or trellises. It is a spreading vine, rooting readily where trailing stems touch the ground. The leaves are alternate, entire, five to ten centimetres long and three to six centimetres broad. The flowers are small, produced on pendulous spikes four to eight centimetres long at the leaf nodes, the spikes lengthening ...

See also:

Black pepper, Black pepper - Varieties of pepper, Black pepper - The pepper plant, Black pepper - History, Black pepper - Ancient times, Black pepper - Postclassical Europe, Black pepper - China, Black pepper - Pepper as a medicine, Black pepper - Flavour, Black pepper - World trade, Black pepper - Notes

Read more here: » Black pepper: Encyclopedia II - Black pepper - The pepper plant

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Biological dispersal - Dispersal in plants

Unlike animals, plants are limited in their ability to seek out favorable conditions for life and growth. Consequently, plants have evolved many ways to disperse and spread a population through their seeds or spores (see also vegetative reproduction). Those properties or attributes that promote the movement of the next generation away from the parent plant may involve the fruit more so than the seeds themselves. Dispersal is a universal biological need, and it is to be expected that most higher plants have solved the problem in ...

See also:

Biological dispersal, Biological dispersal - Dispersal in plants, Biological dispersal - Gravity, Biological dispersal - Mechanical dispersal, Biological dispersal - Wind, Biological dispersal - Water, Biological dispersal - Animals, Biological dispersal - Dispersal in animals, Biological dispersal - Non-motile animals, Biological dispersal - Motile animals, Biological dispersal - Reference

Read more here: » Biological dispersal: Encyclopedia II - Biological dispersal - Dispersal in plants

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Citrus canker - Pathology

Plants infected with citrus canker have characteristic lesions on leaves, stems, and fruit with raised, brown, water-soaked margins, usually with a yellow halo or ring effect around the lesion. Older lesions have a corky appearance, still in many cases retaining the halo effect. The bacterium propagates in lesions in leaves, stems, and fruit. The lesions ooze bacterial cells that, when dispersed by wind and rain, can spread to other plants in the area. Infection may spread further by large storm events including tornadoes and hurricanes. The ...

See also:

Citrus canker, Citrus canker - Biology, Citrus canker - Pathology, Citrus canker - Detection, Citrus canker - Susceptibility, Citrus canker - Management, Citrus canker - Distribution and economic impact, Citrus canker - Australia, Citrus canker - Brazil, Citrus canker - United States

Read more here: » Citrus canker: Encyclopedia II - Citrus canker - Pathology

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Ginkgo - Cultivation and uses

Ginkgo has long been cultivated in China; some planted trees at temples are believed to be over 1,500 years old. The first record of Europeans encountering it is in 1690 in Japanese temple gardens, where the tree was seen by the Dutch botanist Engelbert Kaempfer. Because of its status in Buddhism and Confucianism, the Ginkgo is also widely planted in Korea and parts of Japan; in both areas, some naturalisation has occur ...

See also:

Ginkgo, Ginkgo - Characteristics, Ginkgo - Habit, Ginkgo - Stem, Ginkgo - Leaves, Ginkgo - Reproduction, Ginkgo - Name, Ginkgo - Prehistory, Ginkgo - Cultivation and uses, Ginkgo - Medical uses, Ginkgo - Side effects

Read more here: » Ginkgo: Encyclopedia II - Ginkgo - Cultivation and uses

fruit tree propagation: Encyclopedia II - Olive - Cultivation and uses

The Olive has been used since ancient times for the making of olive oil and for eating of the fruit, which, being bitter in its natural state, must be subjected to fermentation or cured with lye or brine to be made edible. It is not known when olives were first cultivated for harvest. Among the earliest evidence for the domestication of olives comes from the Chalcolithic Period archaeological site of Teleilat Ghassul in what is today modern Jordan. The plant and its products are frequently referred to in the Bible and by the ea ...

See also:

Olive, Olive - Cultivation and uses, Olive - Cultivars, Olive - Growth and propagation, Olive - Fruit harvest and processing, Olive - Pests and diseases

Read more here: » Olive: Encyclopedia II - Olive - Cultivation and uses




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