Abstract

Significant genotypic variation at both the family and clone-within-family levels was seen for hypocotyl rooting and the rooting of adventitious shoots produced in vitro for Pinus radiata D. Don. High rooting frequencies for hypocotyls were obtained in the absence of exogenous auxin; auxin greatly stimulated the rooting of adventitious shoots. No correlation was seen between the rooting of hypocotyls and shoots; families whose hypocotyls rooted at high frequencies did not necessarily produce shoots that rooted at high frequency. No correlation was seen between adventitious shoot production and subsequent rooting at either the family or clone level. The lack of a negative correlation indicated that selecting families or clones for high levels of shoot production will not automatically select for low rooting ability, obviating a possible bottleneck for commercial propagation of Pinus radiata. Significant family by replication interaction suggests that rooting protocols could be optimized through manipulations of the rooting environment for each family.

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