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Propagation and Growth of Amentotaxus formosana by Stem Cutting, Air-Layering, and Seeds

  • Date of declaration:2018-11-01
Jeng-Der Chung, Ching-Te Chien, Chien-Fan Chen, Cheng-Fong Chen, Tzer-Tong Lin
Year
2019
Key Words
Amentotaxus formosana Li, flowering, growth, air-layering, seedling, stem cutting.
Abstract

Amentotaxus formosana Li is endemic to southern Taiwan. Due to a small limited population, this species had been conserved and protected. Seeds of A. formosana in its natural habitat are very few, and natural generation by sprouting from basal stems was investigated. In this paper, stem cutting and air layering techniques were used for vegetative propagation, and the growth of rooted cuttings and air-layered twigs was measured. Further, seeds collected from air-layered plants were germinated, and seedling growth was measured. A suitable time for stem cutting of A. formosana was in October and November when bud dormancy began, and rooting percentages from 61 mother trees were 13~100% within 6 mo. In 11 trees selected from 13-yr-old stem-cut trees and used for air-layering treatment, rooting percentages increased in late March when tree sap began to flow and further increased to high percentages of 89~100% in mid-July. There were great differences in rooting percentages among mother trees treated with stem cutting and air-layering. Rooted cuttings did not grow well, and > 90% died after 2 yr of cultivation in a nursery, but rooted small trees from air-layering grew well, and the survival percentage was 82% after 4.5 yr of cultivation, while the survival percentage of seedlings from seeds was 57.9% after 1.6 yr of cultivation. Air-layered rooted twigs of A. formosana were planted in pods, and bud differentiation was induced in June; the flowering percentage in all the planted trees was about 40%. However, the number of male flowers per tree ranged 1.5~5.0 and that of female flowers was 1.0~10.8. Further, by hand pollination, the maximum number of filled seeds per tree was 2.7 seeds. Rooted cuttings grew slowly, and the annual average height was < 5 cm, while the annual average height of seedlings from seeds was 7.3 cm. However, the annual average height of rooted air-layer trees exceeded 10 cm due to budding twice a year: vegetative buds first followed by reproductive buds.