tubers,stems,flower,rhizomes,fruit,leaves,bulbs
Vegetative propagation is categorized as asexual reproduction. The process involves a single plant.
1. Vegetative propagation 2. Sexual reproduction and 3. Asexual reproduction
sexual and asexual
Asexual reproduction refers to the breeding process from a single organism. Here are the five types of asexual reproduction: Fission, Budding, Vegetative propagation, Sporulation, and Fragmentation.
plant propagation means producing same type of plant by different type 1. propagation by seed 2. vegetative propagation Bud sprout 3. Grafting 4. Budding 5. Layering 6. Tissue culture
Asexual reproduction refers to the type of reproduction whereby an offspring inherits all the genes from a single parent. Examples include budding and vegetative propagation.
Asexual propagation
vegetation propagation
Sexual propagation involves the fusion of male and female gametes to create offspring with genetic diversity, while asexual propagation involves producing offspring without the need for gamete fusion, resulting in genetically identical offspring to the parent plant.
There are three primary types of propagation: sexual propagation, asexual propagation, and micropropagation. Sexual propagation involves the use of seeds or spores to create new plants, while asexual propagation uses plant parts like cuttings, grafting, or division to create new plants. Micropropagation involves growing plants from small plant parts in a laboratory setting.
Tissue culture or micro-propagation
Producing new plants from the propagules of existing plant is known as plant propagation. It may be sexual, asexual and vegetative types.