Have you ever snipped a stem from a plant, stuck it in water, and watched it grow roots? If so, you’ve already mastered the first letter of the Abeceda vegetativnog razmnozavanja (The ABCs of Vegetative Propagation).
The ABCs of Plant Cloning: A Deep Dive into Vegetative Propagation abeceda vegetativnog razmnozavanja.pdf
While the file name suggests a simple guide (like a PDF workbook), the topic itself is a fascinating biological alphabet that allows us to create genetic copies of plants. Let’s break down this “vegetative alphabet” from A to Z. Have you ever snipped a stem from a
In simple terms, it is asexual reproduction in plants. Unlike sexual reproduction (which requires seeds and mixing genes from two parents), vegetative propagation uses the plant’s own somatic cells —leaves, stems, or roots—to generate a new plant. The result? A clone identical to the parent. Let’s break down this “vegetative alphabet” from A