Status report on the development and application of in vitro techniques for the conservation and use of plant genetic resources / by Sarah E. Ashmore
Publisher: Rome : International Plant Genetic Resources Institute 1997Copyright date: ©1997Description: xii, 67 pages ; No illustrations ; 30 pagesContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9290433396 (paperback)
- SB123.3 A846
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Agriculture & other subjects (Sinaut Campus) | Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali | Sinaut Campus | SINAUT SB123.3 A846 1997 c.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | Waqaf daripada Kampus Pertanian Sinaut | 2010006339 |
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SINAUT SB119 D38 2018 c.1 Plant propagation : principles and practices / | SINAUT SB119 P53 2015 c.1 Plant propagation concepts and laboratory exercises / | SINAUT SB123 .S76 2019 c.1 Plant breeding : theory and practice / | SINAUT SB123.3 A846 1997 c.1 Status report on the development and application of in vitro techniques for the conservation and use of plant genetic resources / | SINAUT SB123.57 F35 2017 c.1 Bioteknologi Moden Tumbuhan Menurut Perspektif Islam / | SINAUT SB123.75 K36 1994 v.21 c.1 Storage of intact shoots of hopea odorata roxb. and its influence on rooting ability / | SINAUT SB125 B75 1996 c.1 The Royal Horticultural Society : Pruning & Training / |
Includes tables
The use of in vitro culture techniques enlarges the options available for the collecting, ex situ conservation and exchange of plant species which produce no or short-lived (recalcitrant) seeds or which are vegetatively propagated. In vitro field collecting techniques can be used to overcome some of the serious limitations encountered by the plant germplasm collector. In vitro storage techniques, including slow growth for the medium term and cryopreservation (liquid nitrogen, -196°C) for the long term, present great advantages for the conservation of the genetic resources of problem species. In addition, in vitro techniques offer the possibility of eliminating pathogens and thus conserving and exchanging germplasm in a disease-free condition.
However, despite their potential, in vitro conservation techniques are currently used to a limited extent only. This is partly due to the fact that they are little known and partly because further research is still needed in some areas.
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