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How long vegetativley propagated stuff can go on for is interesting, will we run out of granny Smith apples one day. Some things one hears about seem to have gone on a long time, like the cuttings people take from 1000 year old trees.
I think the trick with Nomocharis is to dig them every couple of years - late autumn before the new roots emerge - and replant them in a fresh rich mix. johnw
Quote from: johnw on January 09, 2012, 11:06:04 PMI think the trick with Nomocharis is to dig them every couple of years - late autumn before the new roots emerge - and replant them in a fresh rich mix. johnwSo John, this is what you have been doing (approximately) since 1986/1993?You certainly seem to have the knack! Bravo!
This aging stuff is interesting. The concern with cloning in animals was that telomeres or small bits of extra DNA that shorten when cells divide, eventually disappear and then the cell dies. So cell life can be based on telomere length. When you clone a sheep you have a lamb that already has the old DNA of its "parent" with short telomeres. For example if a sheep was going to live to 10 years and die of old age, if you cloned that sheep when it was 8 the resulting lamb could die at 2 of old age because its DNA was old when it was born. With plants some are short lived some are long lived. So comparing cuttings taken from 1000 year old trees to cuttings/divisions of shorter lived species is not possible. The cutting from a 1000 year old tree may live a very very long time because the original mother tree could have kept going for a long time. Some short lived plants may be able to be kept going through vegetative propagation but may become weak over time. A neat example in plants is bamboo, for some species only one or two plants were collected and propagated over the years. These plants have been distributed around the world and after many years in cultivation (100+ in some cases) almost all of the plants of 1species will mature and flower, from all corners of the world. These plants have been vegetatively propagated for many years but it never 'rejuvenated ' them, they all kept aging and matured at the same time anyway.
The question is, I think, why does the Lily/nomocharis die at all. My own experience is that scale propagated plants live as long as seed propagated do. However, many lilies dislike sitting in the same place for a very long time. They decline and this is not necessarily due to virus since they are rejuvenated by moving into a fresh place. It seems to me that he soil is sooner or later becoming adverse. This could have many reasons: Too many decaying lily roots causing excess fungal activity. too many daughter bulbs competing for space and nutrients, proliferation of nematodes, exhaustion of trace elements, proliferation of other pathogens like botrytis.A plant that is weakened by any of these causes (or even by a non-lethal virus infection) might die prematurely by a cause that would not kill a vigorous plant. Lilium lancifolium and bulbiferum have been around, vegetatively propagated, in this country for well over a hundred years perhaps well over two hundred in the case of bulbiferum. Never the less, the individual plant will usually start to decline after five - ten years in the same place.A related question. At what time do you successfully transplant Nomocgais?CheersGöte
Isn't it likely that a scaled bulb will take any virus from its parent, and is 'aged' in that sense.With lilies there are techniques for 'cleaning up' propagated material i.e. removing virus contamination from it.