Maximum Yield USA 2015 January | Page 54

the circle of life “Seeds are tiny, live plants in stasis, usually with a food store inside a protective shell called a seed coat.” One of the benefits of indoor gardening is that it allows the gardener control over the seasons, and the environment plants are grown in. With this added element of control, the natural life cycle of plants can be somewhat manipulated to the advantage of the savvy indoor gardener. But before the novice gardener can begin manipulating conditions in the indoor garden to affect a plant’s stages of growth, a grower must have a good understanding of how plants start, develop and grow. The Seedling and Growth Stages A plant starts off as a seed. Seeds are tiny, live plants in stasis, usually with a food store inside a protective shell called a seed coat. The tiny plants already have one or two seed leaves (cotyledons), a stem (hypocotyl) and a root (radicle). Under the right environmental conditions, viable seeds will sprout. Seeds always require water, generally require warmth, and sometimes have specific light requirements. To conserve space and help keep the sprouting seeds manageable, rooting cubes, cell partitions for 1020 trays or plastic cups are just a few of the options to house young seedlings. Growers should note the planting date, as well as the varieties planted. Plastic label stakes can be moved from container to container with the plant. A warm location is usually preferred, and sometimes a heating mat is used to help maintain sprouting temperature. Moisture passes through the seed coat through tiny holes called micropyles. Although not usually necessary, presoaking the seeds in water may hasten this process. The moisture 52 Maximum Yield USA  |  January 2015 swells the embryo, which employs hydraulic pressure to burst the seed coat. The radicle extends to establish the root system, and the cotyledons unfurl and become the first leaves of the plant. Seedlings are tender and susceptible to mortal damage, so should be treated carefully. Vigorous growth occurs during preadolescence. The plant develops in size, both in leaf and shoot development, and extends the root system. As seedlings outgrow their original containers, they should be carefully transplanted into larger containers. Cuttings are sometimes taken from a plant and rooted in a process known as vegetative propagation. With this method, a growth tip and a section of stem are cut from the parent plant and the stem is kept moist and placed in a lighted, warm location until roots develop. This is possible because there are cells called meristematic cells in the stem that under the right conditions will become root cells. Plants started from cuttings are sections of the mother plant from which the cuttings came, and as such tend to be very similar to each other. These types of plants are commonly referred to as clones, as they share the same DNA as the mother plant. Gardeners use this to their advantage to increase numbers of superior specimens, or to learn about a particular plant by examining its cuttings. For example, if a plant cutting is taken and rooted, then exposed to flowering conditions, then the flower color of the parent plant can be determined even though the original parent plant hasn’t started to flower. Making sure each cutting has an appropriate label can simplify identification when matching plant cutting to parent.