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Article Title:
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Canna Lily Sales Face a Chaotic Future

Article Description:
====================

Many agricultural plants that are reproduced by vegetative
division face a mysterious problem that results in a decline in
the clone vigor, and most farmers and nurserymen claim that the
plant crop has "run out." A number of factors adversely
affect the plant clone to the point that it becomes unproductive
and uneconomical to continue growing.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

970 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2006-09-14 11:12:00

Written By:     Patrick Malcolm
Copyright:      2006
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Canna Lily Sales Face a Chaotic Future
Copyright © 2006 Patrick Malcolm
Ty Ty Nursery
http://www.tytyga.com



Many agricultural plants that are reproduced by vegetative
division face a mysterious problem that results in a decline in
the clone vigor, and most farmers and nurserymen claim that the
plant crop has "run out." A number of factors adversely affect
the plant clone to the point that it becomes unproductive and
uneconomical to continue growing.

A technique has been discovered that has revitalized the
agricultural crops such as strawberry, raspberry, blackberry,
sweet potato, banana, and a newcomer: the canna lily. This flower
bulb or rhizome is facing present and future disastrous
consequences unless governmental regulatory steps are taken to
correct the dilemma facing the canna lily industry. Since the
1940s, canna lily rhizomes have been continuously commercially
grown from the original stock that could easily be harvested in
the fall, packaged and resold by Dutch mailorder companies (few
exist today, most went bankrupt) as named varieties. Commerce
developed so extensively around the success of selling millions
of these rhizomes that some farmers began to cultivate canna
lilies in fields, planted in rows like corn, exclusively for the
Dutch mailorder companies. For some canna growers in the states
of Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas, the financial rewards were so
excessive, that they began to plant hundreds of acres as an
exclusive agricultural crop. Because of a shift in business
retailers a decade ago, when the canna lily sales were shifted
away from packaged rhizomes of mailorder companies to the potted,
growing, blooming canna lilies for spring and summer sales by
boxstores such as Walmart, Lowes, and Home Depot. The boxstores
bought their potted products mainly from contracted nursery
growers, purchased as dormant, canna lily rhizomes from the
exclusive field grown canna farmers who originally supplied the
mailorder companies just a decade ago. This dramatic change from
selling dormant canna lily bulbs to trusting mailorder customers
to the customers at box stores, who observed the plant flowers
and leaves before purchasing, has made it necessary for box
stores to reject many of the inferior potted canna lilies, that
had over the years declined (run out) to a state of
unpredictability. This rejection had not occurred to mailorder
customers who were buying an unseen, untested rhizome with a
"wish" that it grow into that beautifully-pictured dormant plant
that was packaged for sale in the mailorder catalog.

Growing canna lilies for retail sale has now become a crisis much
like the one that threatened the growers of strawberry plants,
raspberry bushes, blackberry bushes, and banana trees years ago.

The canna commercial growers proceeded each year to set aside
part of the current canna rhizome crop to use as seed for renewal
planting the following season. As growing continued each year,
certain genetic defects and susceptibilities began to appear and
accumulate and grow more seriously each year. The canna farms
continued regrowing and selling more and more diseased and
mutated canna rhizomes each year, until they could be viewed with
horror in full bloom with the distorted flowers and ratty leaves
in contrast to the buyers at the stores and their unhappy retail
customers. Many of these canna varieties were originally grown
and sold as true to name varieties. After many decades of
vegetative reproduction, the canna crop has become a mixture of
harmful and inferior mutations susceptible to many diseases,
insects, nematodes, and flower abnormalities.

Commercial growers of cannas practiced a technique that they
called "roguing" that involved searching through rows of cannas
in full bloom and discarding those that appeared to vary visually
from the desired variety intended to be grown. This technique
only worked partially, because many of the weaknesses and
inferior qualities could not be visually determined, such as
canna rhizomes that failed to bloom at the time the farmer
decided to "rogue" the canna fields. Additionally, the genetic
factors that were mutated into the rhizomes that made the plant
susceptible to diseases and other impediments would not be seen,
since the commercial fields were normally sprayed effectively to
remove pests; however, the normal home gardener does not expect
to buy a plant that must be continuously sprayed with fungicides,
nematode treatments, or for insects, and as soon as their potted
plants are placed in the home garden, the leaves are exposed to
the assaults of the leaf rollers, and the webworms, and the
rhizomes become infested with the ravages of the nematodes. This
disenchantment of retail buyers and admirers of cannas is
expected to drastically curb the future purchases of canna
lilies.

Plant decline in such agricultural products as strawberry plants,
raspberry plants, blackberry plants, sweet potato vines, and
banana trees has been approached and largely overcome by the
process of tissue culture. Plant scientists have discovered that
the rapidly growing tip of a plant called the "apical meristem,"
can be removed and placed into a tissue growing medium. The
plants from which the apical meristems are removed are carefully
selected to reproduce and must conform to the original desirable
characteristics of the parent cultivar. The apical meristem grows
so rapidly that by carefully selecting the few cells at the tip,
virus and other mutation problems are left behind to result in a
new plant that is vigorous, disease-free, and fast growing.

This group of cells grows into a complete plant with shoots and
roots systems intact, that are collectively called "nuclear stock
mother plants." These "mother plants" are used to divide
vegetatively from which commercial, private sector nurseries are
permitted to sell certified plants to farmers that are free of
virus, bacteria, and other diseases.

As of August 1, 2006, no suggestion has been made to restore the
canna growing industry from its present chaotic disposition by
the use of tissue culture technique. Tissue culture could restore
the reputation of marketing and production of canna lily rhizomes
to a satisfactory acceptance level of approval by both wholesale
and retail customers.




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Written by: Patrick Malcolm. Learn more about various plants, 
or purchase ones mentioned in this article by visiting the 
author's website: http://www.tytyga.com


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