Methods for vegetative propagation of wild enset (Ensete ventricosum (Welw.) Cheesman) that make genotype conservation possible
2021
Abstract The declining trends in crop wild relative genetic resources in many crop centers of origins including Ethiopia require short and long-term conservation strategies. Enset (Ensete ventricosum) is arguably the most important cultivated food security crop of Ethiopia with dwindling wild stocks. The cultivated enset is propagated clonally through adventitious bud sprouting from the corm after the distraction of the apical meristem. Shoot regeneration in the cultivated enset has been induced by humans and has not been observed to occur naturally. The technique of shoot induction has not been extended to the wild enset. To determine whether the capacity for shoot regeneration existed in wild enset and optimize the technique, a series of experiments were conducted. These involved: (i) sucker production from corms of wild enset with and without apical meristem removal; (ii) sprouting capacity of corms ranging 22-49 cm diameter, with removed apical meristem; and (iii) a factorial experiment involving two populations of wild enset (from Shebena and Getiba localities in Sheka zone), two ways of preparing or cutting the corms: tero and tubo, i.e. cutting the pseudostem at the corm junction and cutting it at 25-30 cm height, respectively, and three extents of parting the corm (whole, half, and quarter) using corms with a diameter of 45±2.9 cm. The experiments revealed that wild enset can be successfully propagated vegetatively in the same way as the cultivated enset. It also revealed that the regeneration process involved callus formation and adventurous bud proliferation from corms only after the apical meristem was removed. Corms of different sizes varied in their capacity for regeneration significantly with a linear increase in regeneration frequency with corm size. With a one cm increase in corm diameter, regeneration frequency increased by 3.138 %. The two populations of wild enset showed non-significant differences in regeneration capacity; however, the achieved regeneration was generally analogous to that observed among cultivated enset clones: whole corms resulted in a longer time to emergence and fewer sucker per corm than split corms. Specifically, halved corms emerged significantly (p
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