Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique

Syzygium malaccense belonging to the large family of Myrtaceae produces medicinal plant parts and edible fruits which contain high nutritional values and antioxidants. However, the limited occurrence of this fruit species within Malaysia has hindered its commercialization potential. Large-scale plan...

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Published in:Food Research
Main Author: Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rynnye Lyan Resources 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85217798914&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.8%28S4%29.8&partnerID=40&md5=940e37f67adf51fa461e54bad5bf8def
id 2-s2.0-85217798914
spelling 2-s2.0-85217798914
Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
2024
Food Research
8

10.26656/fr.2017.8(S4).8
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85217798914&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.8%28S4%29.8&partnerID=40&md5=940e37f67adf51fa461e54bad5bf8def
Syzygium malaccense belonging to the large family of Myrtaceae produces medicinal plant parts and edible fruits which contain high nutritional values and antioxidants. However, the limited occurrence of this fruit species within Malaysia has hindered its commercialization potential. Large-scale planting is necessary to promote this indigenous fruit. A timely supply of sufficient planting materials is needed for this purpose. To date, this tree species is mainly propagated by seeds while stem cutting and grafting techniques are less successful. Although a whole seed has a single plumule-radicle axis, preliminary work showed that a seed could produce more than one plant with its fragmented portions. The cotyledonary fraction devoid of embryo could become regenerative leading to the formation of an entire plant. This phenomenon in S. malaccense could be associated with polyembryony documented in many other members within Myrtaceae. The present study explored seed fractionation as a non-conventional method in the propagation of S. malaccense. The seeds cut systematically into separated halves and quarters were studied for in vivo sprouting potential in a moistened sand medium. The experiment was carried out on germination racks in the laboratory. The results indicated that the reduced reserve did not impact the development of full plants from the seed fractions. The quarter seeds were comparable to the half seeds with a full plant regeneration rate of up to 1.5 while the intact whole seeds had a rate of 0.93. Thus, this simple seed fractionation technique is useful for the multiplication of S. malaccense. Moreover, most of the remaining seed fragments were rooted simultaneously but their shoots were yet to be visible by the end of the study period of five months. Attempts that facilitate the shoot development after adventitious rooting from the fractions through the manipulation of some environmental factors would be beneficial for the propagation of this fruit species. The genetic fidelity of the plantlets originating from a single seed is another research focus in sourcing an alternative for clonal planting materials. © 2024 The Authors.
Rynnye Lyan Resources
25502166
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
spellingShingle Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
author_facet Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
author_sort Nur Marini Fatini M.A.; Tsan F.Y.; Siti Maslizah A.R.; Yusuf C.Y.L.
title Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
title_short Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
title_full Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
title_fullStr Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
title_full_unstemmed Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
title_sort Propagation of Syzygium malaccense through seed fractionation technique
publishDate 2024
container_title Food Research
container_volume 8
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.26656/fr.2017.8(S4).8
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85217798914&doi=10.26656%2ffr.2017.8%28S4%29.8&partnerID=40&md5=940e37f67adf51fa461e54bad5bf8def
description Syzygium malaccense belonging to the large family of Myrtaceae produces medicinal plant parts and edible fruits which contain high nutritional values and antioxidants. However, the limited occurrence of this fruit species within Malaysia has hindered its commercialization potential. Large-scale planting is necessary to promote this indigenous fruit. A timely supply of sufficient planting materials is needed for this purpose. To date, this tree species is mainly propagated by seeds while stem cutting and grafting techniques are less successful. Although a whole seed has a single plumule-radicle axis, preliminary work showed that a seed could produce more than one plant with its fragmented portions. The cotyledonary fraction devoid of embryo could become regenerative leading to the formation of an entire plant. This phenomenon in S. malaccense could be associated with polyembryony documented in many other members within Myrtaceae. The present study explored seed fractionation as a non-conventional method in the propagation of S. malaccense. The seeds cut systematically into separated halves and quarters were studied for in vivo sprouting potential in a moistened sand medium. The experiment was carried out on germination racks in the laboratory. The results indicated that the reduced reserve did not impact the development of full plants from the seed fractions. The quarter seeds were comparable to the half seeds with a full plant regeneration rate of up to 1.5 while the intact whole seeds had a rate of 0.93. Thus, this simple seed fractionation technique is useful for the multiplication of S. malaccense. Moreover, most of the remaining seed fragments were rooted simultaneously but their shoots were yet to be visible by the end of the study period of five months. Attempts that facilitate the shoot development after adventitious rooting from the fractions through the manipulation of some environmental factors would be beneficial for the propagation of this fruit species. The genetic fidelity of the plantlets originating from a single seed is another research focus in sourcing an alternative for clonal planting materials. © 2024 The Authors.
publisher Rynnye Lyan Resources
issn 25502166
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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