Woody plants provide many challenges to the tissue culturist. Although there are many excellent tissue culture books and manuals available, these are generally strongly biased towards herbacious crops. Consequently, they often do not pay sufficient attention to the problems that specifically apply to
in vitro
culture of tree species. Culture of the latter often poses problems which are either absent or of lesser significance when culturing herbacious species.
When trees in the field are used as explant source, the problems can be especially severe. For example, the physiological condition of the explants is difficult to control because of variation in weather and biotic factors. Furthermore, it is often difficult to obtain explants free of contaminants from field grown trees. Lack of genetic uniformity and maturation are additional problems one often has to deal with when culturing tree cells or tissues. These problems are emphasized in this text.
In vitro
culture of trees is not viewed in isolation. It is considered in conjunction with breeding, traditional cloning and other common tree improvement techniques. The text discusses theoretical as well as practical aspects of the
in
vitro
culture of trees.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
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I consider this an excellent book for the active researcher on tissue culture of trees. It also provides an update for progress on species of interest and the subject/species index (with Latin and common names) is very helpful.
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Commonwealth Forestry Review, 73:1
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Illustrationen
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-94-015-8058-8 (9789401580588)
DOI
10.1007/978-94-015-8058-8
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Laboratory organization and equipment.- Media preparation.- Collection, sterilization, excision and culture.- Clonal propagation.- Special cultures.- Secondary metabolite production.- Pathology.- Nitrogen fixation.- Storage of cultures.- Genetic modification.- Epilogue.