Asexual reproductive process in which a small portion of the cell membrane and cytoplasm receive a nucleus and pinch off from the parent cell.
grafting with a single bud instead of a piece of wood containing several buds.
the practice of removing a bud from a cane and inserting it in a slot in a bit of rootstock.This is one of two common methods of cloning a rose cultivar, the other being cutting. It is common practice that the rootstock is a cultivar distinct from that of the bud.
Cells are constantly sampling their outside environment, taking in substances from outside of the cell, as well as releasing substances to the external environment - in this way, cells can communicate with one another to form complex organisms. This is typically accomplished through budding.
The use of a bud for grafting. A technique used to obtain new fruit trees with the same characteristics as those already producing good quality fruit in quantity. A bud is cut from a mother tree scion and spliced into the bark of a young seedling or clonnaly produced rootstock. A method of vegetative propagation of plants by implantation of buds from the mother plant into a rootstock. Grafting by inserting a bud with a small amount of attached bark or stem tissue into a cut in the bark of the rootstock.
A propagation technique in which a single bud is used in grafting rather than a section of stem with several buds
Form of asexual reproduction in certain protozoa wherein a dividing cell divides into two unequal parts, the larger part being considered the parent and the smaller one the bud.
propagation by inserting one plant's bud into the bark of another (the rootstock). If a union occurs, the bud develops the characteristics of its own plant, while the rootstock provides a strong root system.
Vegetative method of propagating woody plants. A single bud is physically cut out of one variety (called the scion). This bud is then combined to another related variety (called the rootstock). The scion and rootstock become one living organism. Budding produces a plant that keeps a desired characteristic for the scion while adding a vigorous rootstock
Asexual reproduction in which a more or less complete new organism simply grows from the body of the parent organism and eventually detaches itself.
The most common form of yeast cell reproduction, where tiny buds appear as outgrowths at the edges of a cell and eventually break away and form a new cells.
reproduction of some unicellular organisms (such as yeasts) by growth and specialization followed by the separation by constriction of a part of the parent
A type of graft in which the scion is a bud. See asexual propagation page.
Formation of a small progeny cell from a protozoan cell. 459
A method of asexual reproduction common in some lower animal groups in which part of the body wall bulges outward and eventually forms a new individual, which becomes detached from the parent. Budding can also occur in single-celled organisms such as yeast.
Asexual formation of small, rounded outgrowths from a parent cell. These will become conidia.
A process during asexual reproduction by which a new, duplicate plant or animal begins to form at the side of the parent and enlarges until an individual is created.
Asexual production of new organisms; usually found in yeast; 2. the process by which HIV and similar viruses leave the cell (other than by lysing).
a form of asexual reproduction where a bud or outgrowth from the end or side of the parent cell emerges and develops into a new organism.
1. A method of asexual reproduction in which a new individual is derived from an outgrowth (bud) that becomes detached from the body of the parent. 2. Among fungi, budding is characteristic of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 3. A form of grafting in which a single vegetative bud is taken from one plant and inserted into stem tissue of another plant so that the two will grow together. The inserted bud develops into a new shoot. See grafting.
starting a new colony without swarming whereby reproductive(s) and a group of workers leave the original colony.
Pinching off of a small part of the parent to form a new organism; a form of asexual reproduction.
reproduction by binary fission, a characteristic form of propogation in yeasts. "The onset of the cellular events is accompanied by the nuclear events of mitosis. ... The initial events of budding can be seen as the development of a ring of chitin around the point where the bud is about to appear. This reinforces and stabilizes the cell wall. Enzymatic activity and turgor pressure the act to weaken and extrude the cell wall. New cell wall material is incorporated during this phase. Cell contents are forced into the progeny cell, and as the final phase of mitosis ends a cell plate, the point at which a new cell wall will grow inwards from, forms." Reproduction in the fungi.
The process of inserting a bud from a plant into an opening in the bark of another kind of plant to propagate a cultivar.
Budding is the formation of a new organism by the protrusion of part of another organism. This is very common in plants and fungi, but may be found in animal organisms, such as the hydra, as well. Usually, the protrusion stays attached to the primary organism for a while, before becoming free.