vue - How to graft tomato and eggplant: tube splice method
Grafting tomato and eggplant can minimize problems caused by flooding, soil-borne diseases, and root-knot nematode. Watch as staff from AVRDC - The World Vegetable Center demonstrate this simple, effective technique.
Commentaires
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creative idea...very nice..thank you for sharing
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good work
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Did the grafted plant actually grow or dry up soon after ?
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whats the purpose of splicing two diffrent plants together .what does this do for the plants .
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hi, i tried to graft between okra plants in the field and it was successful experiment
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Very good , Thanks for sharing
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interesting, thanks.
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Unique. very good and helpful information. much appreciated.
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is there a e-book or kindle on this,and where can i buy the rubber 10mm pipe from
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is there e-book or kindle on this
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AWESOME, AWESOME
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So awesome! Thank you so much for this video
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AVRDC - The World Vegetable Center has several eggplant rootstock lines that provide resistance/tolerance to flooding and root-knot nematode, whereas we have not found any tomato rootstock lines that provide this (for tomato scions). These eggplant rootstocks are also resistant to tomato bacterial wilt and Fusarium wilt. We have a tomato rootstock line that is resistant to bacterial wilt and Fusarium wilt, but it does not have the added advantage of flood- and nematode-resistance.
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I too, am wondering what would be the purpose of grafting tomatoes to eggplant rootstock. What if any advantages are there?
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Hmmm not sure why you would use a eggplant root stock, the root system of eggplant is nowhere as vigorous, strong or as resistant to disease/virus as tomato rootstocks.
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superbe!!!
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Could i graft onto a root stock that still has its original growth tip / stem.. So you could have 1 plant produce more then 1 kind of fruit?
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what excalty is a shaded grafting chamber?
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some ppl say otherwise actually
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