For a greener tomorrow
The little ones at this nursery all seem happy, healthy, and well looked after. And they are all perfect clones of each other. As if they all come from test tubes! The fact is that they do. Welcome aboard TERI’s MTP (Micropropagation Technology Park) where millions of saplings are born, multiplied, raised, and seasoned to weather the world out there.
A new approach
The picture of India’s agricultural health makes a gloomy statement. The
acute need is to achieve higher productivity by developing superior-quality
planting material. This was met when the DBT (Department of Biotechnology),
Government of India, created TERI’s micropropagation park for mass propagation
of cash crops and forest species.
Though traditional breeding helped improve the quality of crops, its tedious and time-consuming nature (specially in the case of forest trees and other perennials that take several years) prevented it from gaining wider acceptance. Micropropagation, on the other hand, has come to be seen as a far more effective way of producing high-quality planting material of various species within a short period of time. This is done by selecting elite genotypes from the natural population of a species and culturing them under germ-free conditions to produce millions of identical plants. The benefits have been multifaceted ever since—greater output, economy of time and space, freedom from seasonal constraints, clone uniformity, and disease-free nature of the regenerants. The Park, therefore, bridged the yawning gap between academic research and its application in the field.
Grey, not green
Our forests have been destroyed, thanks to development (the much-used-and-abused
term), population pressure, and temperamental weather that brings vicious cycles
of droughts, floods, and so on. The cash crops do not fare any better either.
Farmers in developing countries like India attempt to compete with their international
counterparts who have access to infrastructure like the latest equipment, better
irrigation facilities, fertilizers, and, to top it all, technologically advanced
seeds. Though conventional methods of propagation have been used to tide over
these conditions, they were lengthy and had certain inherent limitations. There
was need for a supplementary technology that could provide our farmers better-quality
products and even be used in tandem with the current practices. For the propagation
of forest species too, a more accurate and faster technique was needed.
Micropropagation—the much-needed answer
Micropropagation, simply put, means producing identical plants by culturing
plant tissues or organs under sterile conditions. For mass propagation of forest
species, the DBT set up two tissue-culture pilot plants in 1989, one of them
being at T ERI’s facility at Gual Pahari, Gurgaon. In December 1997, the
Gual Pahari plant was upgraded into an MTP to give it a larger mandate—mass
produce economically important plant species, including forest trees, fruit
and cash crops, medicinal and aromatic plants, and so on.
Greening our forests, reclaiming wastelands, and increasing the yield of several economically important cash crops are some of the achievements of TERI’s MTP. And this is how plant biotechnology came of age.
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| Cultures being incubated inside the growth room |
The Park has state-of-the-art infrastructure ranging from modern laboratories and latest equipment, to greenhouses and polyhouses. By December 2003, TERI had supplied over 12.8 million plants to various state forest departments, non-governmental organizations, agro-based companies, and private growers (Table below).
Number of plants dispatched from TERI’s facility
between April 1991 and December 2003
Type of Plants Number of plants dispatched (in million) Forestry 4.14 Fruit crops 0.47 Cash crops 3.33 Medicinal and aromatic 0.47 Ornamentals and miscellaneous 5.15 Total 13.56
Micropropagation protocols for mass propagation of over 70 different species are available at the MTP (Table below).
Some of the plant species for which tissue culture protocols are available at TERI's Micropropagation Technology Park
Forest species Horticultural speciesFoliage plants Flowering plants Fruits Vegetables Medicinal and aromatic plants Miscellaneous Anogeissus pendula Callistemon Carnation Banana Asparagus Aloe vera Hops Anogeissus latifolia Dieffenbachia Chrysanthemum Strawberry Ginger Bacopa (Brahmi) Sugarcane Bambusa bambos Ficus spp. Dahlia Citrus Leek Centella asiatica Turmeric Dendrocalamus asper Hosta Gerbera Potato Geranium (Scented) Dendrocalamus strictus Nandiana Pelargonium Pogostemon cablin (Patchouli) Eucalyptus Tereticornis Philodendron Plumbago Rauwolfia serpentina (Sarpgandha) Eucalyptus camaldulensis Pogonantherum Rose Chlorophytum sp. (Safed musli) Paulownia fortunei Syngonium Thalictrum Swertia chirata (Chirata) Populus Deltoids Yucca Verbascum Vanilla
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| Acclimatization of tissue-cultured plants inside a greenhouse |
Beneficiaries
TERI’s highly aseptic laboratories produce microbe-free plants that make
the international transit for these plantlets smooth. Large-scale field demonstrations
by TERI prove reassuring for forest officials, private growers, breeders, seed
company officials, and others who invest in its expansive services. Amongst
other things, the MTP supplies superior-quality tissue-cultured plants, conducts
contractual research/production of plants, inoculates tissue-cultured plantlets
with efficient mycorrhizae biofertilizers; offers post-delivery field care;
and even helps entrepreneurs set up laboratories, greenhouses, and so on.
The MTP promises good-quality plants with clonal uniformity. It helped popularize strawberry cultivation in non-hilly areas by mass-multiplying day-neutral varieties obtained from overseas and making them available to growers at affordable prices. Cash crops have particularly been helped. More than 2.7 million plantlets/microtubers/ minitubers of different potato varieties (low-sugar content and high dry matter) specially meant for making potato chips were supplied to the industry and farmers. Planting different varieties of tissue-cultured sugar cane has produced more tillers than the conventional plants. A large number of tissue-cultured plants of vanilla produced at the MTP and hardened at TERI’s satellite facility in Guwahati have been distributed through the Spices Board of India in the seven north-eastern states to popularize and increase the acreage of this valued export earner.
Applications/benefits
Though the cost of tissue-cultured plants is variable (it can range from 5 to
15 rupees, depending upon the species and the number of plants required), they
prove to be the right choice because of their high quality. After all, identifying
superior plants amongst a population and mass-cloning them is a step forward
in reducing pressure on limited land resources and an endeavour to green the
earth faster and better.

