Both the AVs have shown plantlet growth, but not the crazy growth on if they had been put "in" the agar, nothing spectacular compared to the normal growth I see when I do this to leaves. I have a feeling when the little suckers get their little roots into the hormone laden substrate that story may change a little. It does seem to show the difference of putting the leaves laid on top (not much influence of substrate - plantlets most often grow from the viens and if these don't have contact with the substrate, the substrate doesn't influence their growth) as putting them partially in (where the veins are in contact with the substrate - which results in a super cloud of plantlets!). With stiff substrate like I had (too much agar in it? or it was just left to set too long?) I'll make more of an effort to slice a spot in it for the leaf and stick it in, instead of me trying to shove it in because I thought it was softer than it was (and damaged the leaf severly in the process).
One thing I am sad about is my jewel orchid has a lot of contamination now. I wasn't sure about growth, but now the growth in the container is definately more white mold than jewel orchid. This was a peice of stem floating in a PPM mixture because of it's likely high contamination. I forgot to swirl it for one day last week, and the next day it had mold - it was that quick and that important! I am either going to have to be more careful about what stock I use to start TCs (bloom and stem starts, cuts of stem that have no active roots or leaf growth on them, etc) rather than the section I started with that had lots of root growth on it that was removed, but left a number of "rough spots" that likely didn't get cleaned well - or I'm going to have to set up one of those swirling tables.
Of course now I'm back to being confused on why we had the aquatic stems on the green (no hormone) substrate, while the AVs and my jewel orchid were on the hormone substrate? At some point it made sense, now it doesn't again. I guess I'm confused over why my jewel orchid stem was on the blue, while the other stems were on the green even tho they grow the same way.
One thing I have noticed with the stems that have nodes... it seems like they have more/faster growth and success when the nodes are in contact with the substrate... which is why Mary's specimen #1 and #2 are doing so much better and producing more explant material faster than #3 which had a much more limited exposure to the substrate. It seems important for maximum benefit of doing TC that you expose your material to the substrate the most efficient way!
Hey look, maybe that can be my first blog post
