Links

Issociate
Impressum

Bookmarks

Yahoo Gmail Google Facebook Delicious Twitter Reddit Stumpleupon Myspace Digg

Search queries

kesseldruckimprägniertes holz giftig, meisennest säubern, harvesting wild comfrey in idaho, forum conifere hoopsi, &esrc=s, rosenknospen angefressen schädlinge, &esrc=s, krähe am teich vertreiben, tube sand or builders sand, akeleisamen brauch lange zu keimen

#1: venus flytrap tissue culture

Posted on 2006-06-12 04:12:35 by tiger.simta

dear all
I need some help about venus flytrap tissue culture .
Is there anyone who did this method before?
I need some Information about the Medium and other important stuffs.
Please help me If It is possible for you.
Best Regards.
Mohammad Karami Nejad

Report this message

Mr Ad

Google

#2: Re: venus flytrap tissue culture

Posted on 2006-06-12 11:21:05 by Johnny Borborigmi

On 2006-06-11 22:12:35 -0400, tiger.simta@gmail.com said:

> venus flytrap tissue culture


First try a search here:

http://www.terraforums.com/


Then
Google is your friend

http://stone.web.brevard.k12.fl.us/science/research/student/ jordona1/index.html

Report this message

#3: Re: venus flytrap tissue culture

Posted on 2006-06-13 04:00:53 by Andrew

tiger.simta@gmail.com wrote:
> dear all
> I need some help about venus flytrap tissue culture .
> Is there anyone who did this method before?
> I need some Information about the Medium and other important stuffs.
> Please help me If It is possible for you.
> Best Regards.
> Mohammad Karami Nejad

I'm assuming you know about the basics of aseptic techniques etc and
have access to the necessary equipment for tissue culture. 1/2 strength
MS (macro and micronutrients) is usually a good medium. As far as where
you can get media and equipment, have a look around the Kitchen Culture
Kits website: www.kitchenculturekit.com/index.htm They sell ready made
media in flasks and the site also provides links to other suppliers and
tissue culture sites.

Buying ready made flasks is of course more expensive than making your
own but if you're planning on doing mericloning it takes away the
hassle of adding hormones. If you just want to do simple seed raising
in flasks, by all means make the flasks up yourself (you can even
replace the MS with an equivalent concentration of fertiliser and still
get results). For home tissue culture, avoid buying supplies from the
chemical companies that supply to the research market. Companies like
Sigma will only supply to laboratories. They also won't respond
favourably to laboratory staff who purchase supplies for their own use.
I've heard a few stories of lab staff who've done this and have then
found themselves barred from legitimate purchases for their lab.

Report this message