Abstract
An efficient protocol has been devised for the propagation and field establishment of Eulophia cullenii (Wight) Bl., a terrestrial orchid having ornamental potentialities, and is critically endangered in Western Ghats, India. Seeds extracted from 60–90-d-old capsules germinated in ½ MS, ¼ MS, Knudson C, or Mitra liquid medium developed into 1.4–2.5-mm-diameter protocorms in 60 d. Supplementation of organic additives like coconut water, peptone, yeast extract, and casein acid hydrolysate (CH) significantly enhanced protocorm growth. Upon subculture onto agar-gelled Mitra medium fortified with 0.05% CH, 56% of protocorms regenerated into shoots through the formation of linear mini-rhizomes. The regenerated shoots grew vigorously in ½ MS, producing new rhizomes. Mature rhizomes from axenic seedlings produced maximum (13 ± 1.4) shoots/whole rhizome in ½ MS fortified with 44.4 μM 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP), in 120–150 d. Horizontal and longitudinal halves of the rhizome also gave multiple shoots (6–8.5) in the presence of 44.4 μM BAP. Shoots or shoot clumps sub-cultured onto ½ MS basal medium produced roots followed by rhizomes in 60–150 d. Seedlings with mature rhizomes showed 70% establishment in the nursery and added a new rhizome at the end of one growth cycle. An average of 70.6% of the rhizomes originating from seedlings during the second growth cycle sprouted to produce new shoots, when planted in the native localities. Asymbiotic germination and cloning through rhizomes thus can provide a large number of vigorous plants of E. cullenii for ornamental exploitation as well as eco-restoration, if rhizome as storage organ is ensured in the propagule.
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More From: In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
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