Quote:
Originally Posted by Selmo
Aren't orchids all monocots. This could make stem cuttings more difficult. Don't see a lot of grasses or corn grown form stem cuttings. Isn't the big problem, the slowness of growth to sellable size. Mass producers are trying to speed up this time window, so taking a stem cutting maybe faster than good old growing by seed.
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A "stem cutting" from an orchid is not the same thing as a stem cutting from a dicot.
From a dicot you induce root growth from the base of the stem cutting to continue growth from the tip. Basically air layering is the same thing, inducing root growth at a point of injury.
From my experience, from an orchid you take a stem cutting, such as from a Dendrobium. It is just a section of the PB that has at least one live node on it.
The node cannot have produced a flower, inflorescence, or have produced a keiki that was removed, and it has to be still alive, not spent or killed by other causes.
The new growth from the cutting is basically the same thing as a new keiki. The "stem cutting", or section of the PB, is nothing more than a nutrient source for the growth of that keiki. The bigger the section of the "stem" the more backup the new growth has and the better it will progress and grow.
I'm not positive, but I think a cutting from a Vanilla orchid can produce roots from one live node and new growth from another on the same cutting. Check me on that to be sure.
The new keiki is the source of roots for most other growths from an orchid "stem cutting".