What Is Plant Mutation – Learn About Mutation In Plants

mutant

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Mutations in plants are a naturally occurring phenomenon that alters the appearance of a plant’s characteristics, most notably in the foliage, flowers, fruit, or stems. For example, a flower may exhibit two colors, exactly half and half. Many times, the mutant plants return to normal the next season.

What Causes Plant Mutations?

When a grower notices a favorable plant mutation, he or she can duplicate the effect through cuttings, grafting, or division. Many variegated plants were cultivated from a mutation in a pure green tree or shrub, for example. Most gardeners can relate to finding solid green shoots in a variegated plant when new growth reverts to solid green. Removing the new green shoots can help keep the variegation intact.

Changes in the genetic code occur randomly and can happen
when mistakes are made during cell division and replication, after exposure to
radiation or certain chemicals or because of weather fluctuations such as
extreme cold or heat. Insect damage or severe pruning also can cause a mutation
in plants. Fasciation
in plants
is a good example. Mutations are noticed most often in spring and
summer.

What Does Plant Mutation Look Like?

Mutations can result in striping on a flower or fruit, variegation, a different color among blooms or foliage, bicolored blooms, a double flower among singles, etc. A chimera occurs when “genetically distinct tissues co-exist within the same plant,” common in roses, dahlias, and chrysanthemums. The mutant plants exhibit different sections of color on a flower.

Fruit can take on a different appearance. For example, in a
cut-open orange, part of the fruit may be a darker color than the rest of the
fruit. A mutation could appear in the skin of the orange, too, with striping or
the thickness of the peel may vary in one section. A sport
mutation
is also common in fruit. Nectarines are an example of a sport.

Reverting is a type of mutation. For example, a dwarf
cultivar may display shoots that have reverted to a parent’s non-dwarf form. Variegation
that reverts to pure green
also is a mutation.

If the mutation is desirable, it doesn’t hurt to leave it on
the plant. An unfavorable mutation can be pruned out. Often, the plant will
return to normal on its own.

This article was last updated on 10/31/21
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Mutations in plants are a naturally occurring phenomenon that alters the appearance of a plant’s characteristics, most notably in the foliage, flowers, fruit, or stems. For example, a flower may exhibit two colors, exactly half and half. Many times, the mutant plants return to normal the next season.

What Causes Plant Mutations?

When a grower notices a favorable plant mutation, he or she can duplicate the effect through cuttings, grafting, or division. Many variegated plants were cultivated from a mutation in a pure green tree or shrub, for example. Most gardeners can relate to finding solid green shoots in a variegated plant when new growth reverts to solid green. Removing the new green shoots can help keep the variegation intact.

Changes in the genetic code occur randomly and can happen
when mistakes are made during cell division and replication, after exposure to
radiation or certain chemicals or because of weather fluctuations such as
extreme cold or heat. Insect damage or severe pruning also can cause a mutation
in plants. Fasciation
in plants
is a good example. Mutations are noticed most often in spring and
summer.

What Does Plant Mutation Look Like?

Mutations can result in striping on a flower or fruit, variegation, a different color among blooms or foliage, bicolored blooms, a double flower among singles, etc. A chimera occurs when “genetically distinct tissues co-exist within the same plant,” common in roses, dahlias, and chrysanthemums. The mutant plants exhibit different sections of color on a flower.

Fruit can take on a different appearance. For example, in a
cut-open orange, part of the fruit may be a darker color than the rest of the
fruit. A mutation could appear in the skin of the orange, too, with striping or
the thickness of the peel may vary in one section. A sport
mutation
is also common in fruit. Nectarines are an example of a sport.

Reverting is a type of mutation. For example, a dwarf
cultivar may display shoots that have reverted to a parent’s non-dwarf form. Variegation
that reverts to pure green
also is a mutation.

If the mutation is desirable, it doesn’t hurt to leave it on
the plant. An unfavorable mutation can be pruned out. Often, the plant will
return to normal on its own.

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