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You are here: Home / Growing Japanese Maples / What is a Japanese Maple Scion or Scions?

What is a Japanese Maple Scion or Scions?

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Michael J. McGroarty
Perry, Ohio 44081  Copyright 2011

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Scion is a term used in conjunction with plant propagation, more precisely, grafting as a means of plant propagation.  Usually when you are propagating plants you take “a cutting” from the parent plant and, through a variety of means, get that cutting to produce roots and grow onto a mature plant that is identical to the parent plant.

However, some plants are not as easily as propagated as others and the cuttings won’t, or in many cases, are very difficult to root.  So in those cases, such as with Japanese maples, instead of trying to root cuttings, the propagator actually grafts a piece of one plant to another plant that already has roots.

The part of the plant that has roots is usually a seedling, a plant grown from seed, known as root stock in the nursery industry.   The “cutting” that is removed from the parent plant is called a scion.  The scion is grafted to rootstock.  The two plant pieces bond together and grow on a single plant.  Usually a very desirable plant.

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  1. Acer palmatum dissectum ‘Goshiki Shidare says:
    December 22, 2011 at 12:02 pm

    […] maple so the foliage throughout the tree varies considerably.   When they are grafted the scions are collected from all over the tree and apparently, since the variegation varies from branch to […]

    Reply

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