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Cloning crops in a CELSS via tissue culture: Prospects and problemsMicropropagation is currently used to clone fruits, nuts, and vegetables and involves controlling the outgrowth in vitro of basal, axillary, or adventitious buds. Following clonal multiplication, shoots are divided and rooted. This process has greatly reduced space and energy requirements in greenhouses and field nurseries and has increased multiplication rates by greater than 20 fold for some vegetatively propagated crops and breeding lines. Cereal and legume crops can also be cloned by tissue culture through somatic embryogenesis. Somatic embryos can be used to produce 'synthetic seed', which can tolerate desiccation and germinate upon rehydration. Synthetic seed of hybrid wheat, rice, soybean and other crops could be produced in a controlled ecological life support system. Thus, yield advantages of hybreds over inbreds (10 to 20 percent) could be exploited without having to provide additional facilities and energy for parental-line and hybrid seed nurseries.
Document ID
19910022469
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Carman, John G.
(Utah State Univ. Logan, UT, United States)
Hess, J. Richard
(Utah State Univ. Logan, UT, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1990
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Ames Research Center, Controlled Ecological Life Support Systems: CELSS '89 Workshop
Subject Category
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Accession Number
91N31783
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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