@article{goldfarb_hackett_furnier_mohn_plietzsch_1998, title={Adventitious root initiation in hypocotyl and epicotyl cuttings of eastern white pine (Pinus strobus) seedlings}, volume={102}, ISSN={["1399-3054"]}, DOI={10.1034/j.1399-3054.1998.1020405.x}, abstractNote={The present paper reports results of experiments to develop a system for studying adventitious root initiation in cuttings derived from seedlings. Hypocotyl cuttings of 2‐week‐old eastern white pine (Pinus strobus L.) seedlings were treated for 5 min with 0, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 or 600 mg l−1 (0, 0.54, 1.07, 1.61, 2.15, 2.69 or 3.22 mM) 1‐naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) to determine the effect on root initiation. The number of root primordia per cutting was correlated with NAA concentration and the square of NAA concentration. Thus, the number increased from less than one per cutting in the 0 NAA treatment to approximately 40 per cutting at 300 mg l‐1 NAA, above which no substantial further increase was observed. The larger number of root primordia formed in response to increasing concentrations of NAA was due to the formation of primordia over a larger proportion of the hypocotyls. Histological analysis of the timing of root primordium formation in hypocotyl cuttings revealed three discernible stages. Progression through these stages was relatively synchronous among NAA‐treated hypocotyl cuttings and within a given cutting, but variation was observed in the portion of different cuttings undergoing root formation. Control‐treated hypocotyl cuttings formed root primordia at lower frequencies and more slowly than NAA‐treated cuttings, with fewer primordia per cutting. Epicotyl cuttings from 11‐week‐old seedlings also formed adventitious roots, but more slowly than hypocotyl cuttings. NAA treatment of epicotyl cuttings caused more rapid root initiation and also affected the origin of adventitious roots in comparison with nontreated cuttings. NAA‐treated epicotyl cuttings formed roots in a manner analogous to that of the hypocotyl cuttings, directly from preformed vascular tissue, while control‐treated epicotyl cuttings first formed a wound or callus tissue and subsequently differentiated root primordia within that tissue. This system of inducing adventitious roots in pine stem cuttings lends itself to studying the molecular and biochemical steps that occur during root initiation and development.}, number={4}, journal={PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM}, author={Goldfarb, B and Hackett, WP and Furnier, GR and Mohn, CA and Plietzsch, A}, year={1998}, month={Apr}, pages={513–522} } @article{goldfarb_howe_hackett_monteuuis_1996, title={Survival and growth of eastern white pine shoot apical meristems in vitro}, volume={46}, ISSN={["0167-6857"]}, DOI={10.1007/BF02307092}, number={3}, journal={PLANT CELL TISSUE AND ORGAN CULTURE}, author={Goldfarb, B and Howe, GM and Hackett, WP and Monteuuis, O}, year={1996}, month={Sep}, pages={171–178} }