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What is a hosta?
Hostas are shade loving perennials that will thrive in
many different soil conditions. They
are grown for their beautiful leaf shapes, colors and textures, and
are grown from
Minnesota and south to Georgia. They are hardy plants that will make
your shade garden
spectacular with beautiful colors all summer long.
How are hostas propagated?
Hostas are propagated either sexually or
asexually. The first
is completed when the pollen from a flower is transferred to the stigma
of a flower and
the ovum are fertilized. The result is seed which must then germinate,
survive its youth,
and mature to start the cycle again. The second involves no combining
of sex cells, pollen
and ovum. The old, reliable dividing of the sections of the plant to
form two or more
plants is a familiar example that has been done with most plants since
people wanted to
create additional plants of the same type. The 'high tech' version
of this is called tissue
culturing, which produces far larger numbers of offspring in a much
abbreviated length of
time. Tissue culture involves taking slivers of cells from one of the
growth areas of the
plant and introducing the appropriate growth hormones to produce the
missing type of
cells, root or meristem or leaf cells. This last method could be compared
to creating 'test
tube babies' or clones of the original plant.
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