Resources by Elizabeth Ball
Title | Available As | Summary | Date | ID | Author |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plant Propagation from Seed | Sexual propagation involves the union of the pollen (male) with the egg (female) to produce a seed. The seed is made up of three main parts: the outer seed coat, which protects the seed; a food reserve (e.g., the endosperm); and the embryo, which is the young plant itself. When a seed is mature and put in a favorable environment, it will germinate, or begin active growth. In the following section, seed germination and transplanting of seedswill be discussed. |
Oct 11, 2019 | 426-001 | ||
Propagation by Cuttings, Layering and Division | Oct 11, 2019 | 426-002 | |||
Care of Specialty Potted Plants | Dec 12, 2022 | 426-101 (SPES-449P) | |||
Annuals: Culture and Maintenance | Annual flowers live only for one growing season, during
which they grow, flower, and produce seed, thereby
completing their life cycle. Annuals must be set out or
seeded every year since they don’t persist. Some varieties
will self-sow, or naturally reseed themselves. |
Jan 14, 2015 | 426-200 (HORT-85P) | ||
Flowering Bulbs: Culture and Maintenance | “Bulbs” is a term loosely used to include corms, tubers,
tuberous roots, and rhizomes as well as true bulbs. This
publication will refer to all of the above as bulbs. Many
vegetables are propagated from or produce edible organs
of these types (e.g., tuber, Irish potato; tuberous root,
sweet potato; rhizome, Jerusalem artichoke; bulb, onion). |
Jan 21, 2015 | 426-201(HORT-88P) | ||
Perennials: Culture, Maintenance and Propagation | May 1, 2009 | 426-203 |