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Nursery Forum & Plant Health
Young bud grafted Ginkgo in training
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<blockquote data-quote="Elmore" data-source="post: 438173" data-attributes="member: 4257"><p>Fast growers? No. Typically moderate to slow in growth rate. </p><p>A cultivar is typically cloned. Reproduced asexually. Rooted, grafted, layered or tissue cultured. Very few exceptions i.e. Acer tataricum subsp. ginnala 'Flame'. It can be produced sexually (seed grown) and still be considered the cultivar 'Flame'. If you were to only grow Ginkgo trees from seed you would have many trees that would be large at maturity,variable in form and many would be female. In general a male is preferred. Typically a Ginkgo is a large tree, 70', 90' or better. If I want a dwarf form or a columnar form it would have to be cloned from a known dwarf or columnar form. To get a male tree you graft a male onto seedling under stock.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Elmore, post: 438173, member: 4257"] Fast growers? No. Typically moderate to slow in growth rate. A cultivar is typically cloned. Reproduced asexually. Rooted, grafted, layered or tissue cultured. Very few exceptions i.e. Acer tataricum subsp. ginnala 'Flame'. It can be produced sexually (seed grown) and still be considered the cultivar 'Flame'. If you were to only grow Ginkgo trees from seed you would have many trees that would be large at maturity,variable in form and many would be female. In general a male is preferred. Typically a Ginkgo is a large tree, 70', 90' or better. If I want a dwarf form or a columnar form it would have to be cloned from a known dwarf or columnar form. To get a male tree you graft a male onto seedling under stock. [/QUOTE]
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