What is Air Layering?
by Andy Walsh
Introduction by Brent Walston
Air layering is the process of removing a large branch or section of
the trunk of a tree to create another tree. Before the branch is
removed it is girdled, protected with peat moss or other media and the
girdled section is allowed to root. After rooting the branch is removed
from the tree. This is a very common practice in bonsai to obtain
another tree from an unwanted branch or to save a thick trunk section
that was going to be removed anyway.
Andy Walsh posted a short but very informative article on the
physiology of this process on the Internet Bonsai Club mail list.
Knowing how a tree forms roots at an air layer site provides powerful
information for not only understanding the process, but also a vehicle
for answering your own questions and solving your own problems in air
layering.
BW
Transport of Food, Water, and Nutrients
Under the bark of trees (dicotyledonous ones) there is a layer of cells
called the phloem. This tissue transports carbohydrates and other
photosynthates (including auxin) down from the leaves to the lower parts of
the plant. Beneath the phloem layer is another layer called the xylem that
transports water and mineral nutrients from the roots and soil up to the
leafy parts of the tree. Beneath the xylem is another xylem layer called the
secondary xylem. These xylem layers are thicker and deeper into the wood of
the tree than the phloem layer. Lying on top of these layers just under the
bark is a layer of actively dividing cells called the cambium.
The Air Layering Process
In the process of airlayering, the bark, the cambium, and the phloem layer
are removed by cutting away about a 1 inch wide ring of these tissues from
around the circumference of the shoot. The xylem however is left intact. This
is known as girdling. Generally, synthetic auxins (in a vehicle of talc
powder or by liquid) are applied to the site where the tissues have been
removed. (Although applying auxin is the general practice today it is not
necessary for many trees). Wet sphagnum moss (or another moisture retentive
soil) is then bunched around and over this girdled site and covered with
plastic and sealed.
What Happens at the Air Layer Site
The removal of the bark, cambium, and phloem, but not the xylem, prevents
carbohydrates and photosynthates from flowing down the trunk past the
girdling site but still allows water and mineral nutrients to flow upward to
the leaves. This keeps the leafy portions of the shoot from drying out and
maintains them with an adequate supply of nutrients. The removal of the
actively growing cambium layer prevents the regeneration of phloem and
healing over of the wound. Because of this the carbohydrates and
photosynthates flowing down the trunk collect at the girdling site. The
presence of these excesses of carbohydrates and photosynthates (esp. auxin)
at the girdling site, plus the presence of the water in the sphagnum moss,
causes dormant adventitious buds in the area to grow into roots. When there
are enough roots to sustain the shoot independently the shoot is cut off of
the tree and then planted or potted.
The Difference Between Air Layers and Cuttings
The propagation of plants by cuttings occurs by the same principles and has
very similar circumstances. The difference is that the shoot is removed from
plant at the start and water and nutrients flow up the shoot from the cut
site by capillary action instead. This kind of propagation can only be done
with small and thin shoots since the flow of water is insufficient for larger
branches. Airlayering solves this problem and allows the creation of new
plants from very large parts of trees.
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