Polyembryonic Vs Monoembryonic Mango Seeds

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  • čas přidán 29. 12. 2019
  • I discuss the differences between polyembryonic and monoembryonic mango seeds and why both poly and monoembryonic mango seeds have their distinct advantages and disadvantages.
    Read more about monoembryonic and polyembyonic seeds at practicalprimate.com/polyembr...
    Visit Practical Primate at practicalprimate.com
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Komentáře • 118

  • @miguelsamaniego8435
    @miguelsamaniego8435 Před 4 lety +10

    Thanks for the info, I didn’t even know there was such a thing. Every day I learn something new. 👍

  • @redtobertshateshandles
    @redtobertshateshandles Před 4 měsíci +2

    I just ate a Monoembryonic Mango fruit and you explained why it had so much flesh.
    Thanks mate.

  • @peterodonnell4404
    @peterodonnell4404 Před 2 měsíci

    An excellent explanation, thank you. I live in Veracruz, Mexico, where mangoes seem to grow in every street, if not in people's yards, on the nature strip or where you would otherwise be walking. Every tree seems to be unique. I picked up two mangoes from two distinct trees in my street (of five or six), which grow very different fruit. I am now germinating them to plant. Now, thanks to your explanation, I know that I can expect a lottery of both of them.

  • @qveenissac
    @qveenissac Před 8 měsíci +1

    Really great vid. Super informative!

  • @chaselex
    @chaselex Před rokem

    Great video. Explains well, and easy to learn from jt

  • @swetamaurya8463
    @swetamaurya8463 Před 3 lety +3

    Marvelous explanation 👍👍👍

  • @louiseahmedtropicalplantgr5000

    Nice information on poly and mono embryonic seeds. I have the 2 types. I currently have Amrupali mango which is monoembryonic, and Fazli mango which is polyembryonic. I grew the Fazli last year not knowing that about it and was surprised when multiple stems popped up. I've just planted another yesterday as last year's died. Can't wait to see if this one will produce multiple stems too.

  • @kaniga2245
    @kaniga2245 Před rokem +3

    Very well explained...I came here to see how polyembryony condition looks like
    Best example for class 12th NCERT Biology

  • @qkal72
    @qkal72 Před rokem

    Great info. Love it

  • @GurvaniAs
    @GurvaniAs Před měsícem

    Thank you so much I was so confused....

  • @francisgarcia565
    @francisgarcia565 Před rokem

    Great video very helpful great job

  • @Swim900
    @Swim900 Před 3 lety +1

    Very good informative video.

  • @guywinzenried8275
    @guywinzenried8275 Před 4 lety +1

    Great explanation !! Very informative !

  • @RajYadav-jv1nd
    @RajYadav-jv1nd Před 3 lety +1

    Very nice information thanks.

  • @HWLee-vu4hv
    @HWLee-vu4hv Před 4 lety +5

    Very informative and educational!

  • @Ovfai20
    @Ovfai20 Před 2 měsíci

    It's really really helpful 👍

  • @ThienNguyen-eg4dh
    @ThienNguyen-eg4dh Před 7 měsíci

    Very good to know!

  • @gelawncare789
    @gelawncare789 Před 4 lety +1

    Very helpful video. Thanks

  • @HaibTshajHaib
    @HaibTshajHaib Před 3 lety +1

    Great info

  • @pratikskamble
    @pratikskamble Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks 😊

  • @Nomad97249
    @Nomad97249 Před rokem +1

    In India also have polyembryoic mangoes but they are not familiar varieties
    And btw, polyembroyic also means we might have the native/heriloom variety hidden inside as mentioned ( true to the seed)

  • @supriyagairola9887
    @supriyagairola9887 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot

  • @vishalyadav-dq8ev
    @vishalyadav-dq8ev Před 4 lety +1

    Tnx a lot

  • @rupakbudathoki5360
    @rupakbudathoki5360 Před 2 lety

    I clearly understand sir….

  • @ritabeitz9598
    @ritabeitz9598 Před rokem +2

    Thanks a lot. I am actually interested in finding out which mangos are poly, so I can grow my own trees true to seed. Thanks !

    • @aashankhan6895
      @aashankhan6895 Před rokem

      Floridan varieties meaning red purple etc are polyembryonic and are true to type while Asiatic varieties are monoembryonic seed donot produce true to type

  • @mdawaisuddin1071
    @mdawaisuddin1071 Před 4 lety +3

    Helpful for my studies 😉
    Thanks a lot sir 👍❣️

  • @Dr.Zubair
    @Dr.Zubair Před 3 lety +10

    Anyone after reading NCERT.

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety

      What’s that Zubair?

    • @Dr.Zubair
      @Dr.Zubair Před 3 lety +2

      @@PracticalPrimate Thats our textbook in india. Was wondering how polyembryony looks like.

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety

      @@Dr.Zubair oh right! Thanks for explaining. I hope it helps! :)

    • @atulverma9502
      @atulverma9502 Před rokem

      Not everyone

    • @Mayog_enic
      @Mayog_enic Před 6 měsíci

      I am here after Reading ncert😅

  • @botanyguide6745
    @botanyguide6745 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you sir

  • @NMW80
    @NMW80 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety +1

      Subbed n liked mate 👍

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you and glad it helped :)

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate 😊

  • @MultiParrot
    @MultiParrot Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks

  • @TheDragonballboy
    @TheDragonballboy Před 3 lety +3

    Wow I didn’t know about the polyembryonic one where you said it has multiple and how you separated it. I had one where I seperwated it by mistake n thought I broke it lmao. Thankfully I still decided to plant it n got a little tree out of it

  • @melodychest9020
    @melodychest9020 Před 6 měsíci

    Saw another video where the guy said that mono-embryonic is an exact clone of the mother and a poly-embryonic has a few clones except one which is not a clone of its mother. Totally confused now!

  • @carlosfres6677
    @carlosfres6677 Před 4 lety +6

    Hello. I planted a polyembryonic seed and 5 seedlings came out of it. Three of the seedlings look vigorous. You said that you can separate the most vigorous ones. Do you have a video or method showing how to separate each of the seedlings without damaging any one of them?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      I don’t sorry Carlos and it is difficult but possible if they are not yet too large. When you repot just break off most of the soil and you may have one or more fall away from the others. Don’t force them if they don’t come easily, they will most likely break and you risk damaging them both/all.

    • @sergebernard
      @sergebernard Před 4 lety +2

      Great question, I’m in the same predicament. Be gentle in other words if you try to separate them, but if you were to keep all of them together and then plant them in the ground in 6 months or so, what could potentially happen long term? Or is it worth the risk and separate them at a early stage?

    • @sisokzero6430
      @sisokzero6430 Před 2 lety

      Oh, here it is. Mine has two seedlings came out of one seed.

  • @adamb.8854
    @adamb.8854 Před 4 lety +2

    Hi, i have an Ataulfo/Honey seed which is poly, and i saw that only one shoot came out, but i saw embyos inside as i planted. Is it still poly? PS mono seeds can be big and vigorous too depending variety.

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      Hi Adam. Yes Ataulfo is poly so it must have been that the others just didn’t make it. And yes definitely, mono can be (and usually is) very vigorous but you don’t know until you grow them :)

  • @madhavgangavalli
    @madhavgangavalli Před rokem +2

    Never knew about polyembryonic mangoes as our Indian mangoes are all monoembryonic. How do the unfertilized clones compare with grafts? Which are better in the long run?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před rokem

      They are both good :) I really like Australian/Asian style mangos and most of those are poly but as you said, a lot of the Indian cultivars are monoembryonic. If I had to pick a downside there is marginally less flesh in a polyembrynic fruit. On the other hand polyembryonic seeds grow true to type and usually fruit within 3-4 years.

  • @DanyalShabirr
    @DanyalShabirr Před 3 lety +7

    Your explanation may or may not be good.... But the way you have sucked every single particle on mango seed is just brilliant...

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety +2

      Hahaha thanks! Squeezed off under water and left to air dry. Wanted them to be clearer for the vid :)

  • @oatiko3065
    @oatiko3065 Před 4 lety +3

    Which of the polyembryonic seeding do you keep?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +2

      With kensington pride (the rootstock I use here) the first seedlings are almost always clones. Different cultivars don’t always follow that rule though, it is cultivar specific.

  • @ArcolaBridge
    @ArcolaBridge Před 2 lety +1

    Walmart in Minnesota has giant mangoes from Robinson that say product of Mexico. Any idea about these? It's one big seed, so monoembrionic.

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi and welcome! Sorry I have no idea, I would suspect one of the common cultivars but I don’t know what’s grown in Mexico. I tried to look it up but the most common types were polyembryonic cultivars.

    • @ArcolaBridge
      @ArcolaBridge Před 2 lety +1

      @@PracticalPrimate I left it on the counter for a few days and it got kind of dry so maybe it won't grow? I'm going to try to grow it and the three others I have.

  • @martinbenko
    @martinbenko Před 4 lety +5

    Did you have those seeds of the same variety or they were different variety ? I heard that Indian mangoes have monoembryonic seeds and Indo-Chinese mangoes have polyembryonic. So can you help me and tell what kind of mangoes you had in this video ? Thank you in advance :)

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety

      Different varieties, mangoes are usually one or the other. These were a Kensington pride (poly) and a Keitt I think (mono)

    • @dawoodsamad7344
      @dawoodsamad7344 Před 2 lety

      Yes that is true about Indian an Info Chinese seeds.

    • @california4775
      @california4775 Před rokem

      India actually has 1000 varieties of mango, many of which are polyembryonic too.

  • @HUSAMWord
    @HUSAMWord Před 3 lety +1

    after germinate more than one how you know which one is the best ?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety +1

      Depends on what you are after but for most cultivars the stronger seedlings (from the one seed) are all clones.

  • @Eldragonic
    @Eldragonic Před 3 lety +2

    After how many months should I separate seedling

  • @sisokzero6430
    @sisokzero6430 Před 2 lety +2

    I have mango seedlings and one of them has 2 (two) sprouts. I'm confuse which one do I plant or cut or should I grow them both?? Please help.

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 2 lety

      I’m a bit late I think but depends on the cultivar. Usually the strongest/biggest seedling is very likely a clone.

    • @temujinkhan6326
      @temujinkhan6326 Před 11 měsíci

      @@PracticalPrimate A clone of the mother tree? So the biggest one will likely fruit the same as the mango fruit/seed?

  • @CarnutMM
    @CarnutMM Před 4 lety +2

    Do you know if Gary mango is monoembryonic?

  • @chitrasweet5457
    @chitrasweet5457 Před 4 lety +2

    Which one is best dude? Poly or mono?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      Either, I like cultivars of both types. Poly is great because you can reproduce the cultivar without grafting but mono generally have smaller seeds. Flavour is a toss up, depends on the cultivar.

  • @blazeaglory
    @blazeaglory Před 4 lety +2

    So, with mono,I could get a good one or bad?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes it is a lottery.

    • @blazeaglory
      @blazeaglory Před 4 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate I have a good grower now from a really nice small green/red Mango with a nice, mostly yellow with some almost red, inner fruit which I think was from mexico? Or south america?. Its about 2 feet tall now and almost a year old. I have it in a 3 gallon pot but going to plant in ground. So hoping for a winner!

    • @blazeaglory
      @blazeaglory Před 4 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate Think it might have been a Palmer or a Haden

  • @bkzlab
    @bkzlab Před 2 lety +1

    Is it true that some plants grown monoembryonic seeds will not bear fruits?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 2 lety

      Hi. I have read that some trees will never flower but I’ve never seen it or heard of it happening to anyone I know.

  • @SchallierDieter
    @SchallierDieter Před 3 lety +2

    If I have 2 monoembryonic seeds and I let them grow. Can I graft them on each other and will that produce fruit?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety +1

      You can yes. What you are trying to achieve with them? They would just grow on the new rootstocks just the same.

    • @SchallierDieter
      @SchallierDieter Před 3 lety +1

      @@PracticalPrimate well, the question is... will it ever have fruit?

    • @SchallierDieter
      @SchallierDieter Před 3 lety +1

      Or will this take way more years then if I just take a polyembryonic seed (if I can find one)

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 3 lety +4

      @@SchallierDieter they will both be seedlings (even though a clone) so will take a similar amount of time. Grafting them on to a mature tree can speed up fruiting but they still have juvenile/young genes and will take longer than Mature scion.

    • @SchallierDieter
      @SchallierDieter Před 3 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate thank you

  • @user-sv7wl5sf6w
    @user-sv7wl5sf6w Před 2 lety

    💕💕💕👍

  • @DoodleHats
    @DoodleHats Před 4 lety +1

    so is the only way to replicate a mono seed mango by grafting?

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      Grafting is the best way and luckily it is easy with mangoes. You could air layer but they are not a good candidate for it.

    • @DoodleHats
      @DoodleHats Před 4 lety +1

      @@PracticalPrimate uh oh. not looking good for my valencia pride seedlings in the back yard then haha

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      Top work them :) I have a video on how to top work a mango tree to whatever cultivar you like (link below). You could always use scion off your Valencia pride, but you might want to mix it up with some other cultivars :) seedling trees can be fun too, you never know what you might get! czcams.com/video/TRP6DyLZZkM/video.html

    • @DoodleHats
      @DoodleHats Před 4 lety +1

      @@PracticalPrimate appreciate the help. I think you linked a kiwi commercial haha but Ill find the vid on your channel. Thanks again

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety

      Haha whoops! Here it is czcams.com/video/TRP6DyLZZkM/video.html

  • @chandrakala7037
    @chandrakala7037 Před 3 lety

    Why we need to go for grafting and under what circumstances like poly or monoembryonic? Please spare your time to explain me

    • @maple5305
      @maple5305 Před 3 lety +1

      when you want a particular kind of tree,as in with specific characteristics like sweeter fruit,high yielding,pest resistant etc,grafting will help because you get choose the preferred scion or rootstock,if you want to mimic a plant with certain desired qualities you can go for clones from polyembryonic seedlings,if you prefer experimenting with plants and plan to develop a new set of desired quality in the plant you can go for monoembryonic seedling since it is a unique individual as opposed to polyembryonic seedling.

    • @chandrakala7037
      @chandrakala7037 Před 3 lety +1

      @@maple5305 thank you:)

    • @chandrakala7037
      @chandrakala7037 Před 3 lety +1

      @@maple5305 sorry again and again, i am disturbing you. Can you please explain why some fruits won't have seeds like papaya, is it because of non- pollination ? How female plants give fruits without pollination? Please share your views

    • @maple5305
      @maple5305 Před 3 lety

      @@chandrakala7037 no issues,it is because of a phenomenon called parthenocarpy,here fertilisation occurs,it is obviously preceded by pollination, parthenocarpy is the development of a fruit(ovary) but in such conditions seeds(ovule/s) fail to develop which is one of the reason for seedless fruits,here either the pollen,sperm,ovum might be dysfunctional! But these days breeders are trying to make use of this phenomenon which is why we come across seedless fruits, seedless fruits means longer shelf life and easier for consumption, another reason is triploid seeds(bananas),a fruit developed from triploid seed will not have a functional seed and hence result into a seedless fruit in the coming generations.

    • @chandrakala7037
      @chandrakala7037 Před 3 lety

      @@maple5305 in my case, fertilization itself is not happening in female papaya tree as i don't have male papaya plant. Still i am getting fruits from this female tree, which are seedless. My doubt is how this fruit is developed when there is no fertilization. Please spare some time to clarify my basic doubt. Thanks in advance.

  • @pigfigjig
    @pigfigjig Před 3 lety +1

    Brilliant.. 💡Consider me subscribed

  • @zengrow3098
    @zengrow3098 Před 4 lety +1

    i think i read somewhere that clones tend to fruit sooner than the one that has been cross-pollinated. Ataulfo seeds are poly and the clones are supposed to fruit in about 3 years. Of course I've yet to get one to survive. I've germinated probably close to 30 ataulfo's over the past 2 summers and none survived past a few weeks after first set of leaves opened. Got a Keitt to survive and it's still growing in the pot, I pulled that out of a worm bin because I wasn't planning on growing a Keitt but now I am :)

    • @PracticalPrimate
      @PracticalPrimate  Před 4 lety +1

      ZenGrow can always graft it over if you don’t like the Keitt too!

    • @zengrow3098
      @zengrow3098 Před 4 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate actually I liked the Keitt. They sell those and Tommy Atkins around here but I don't like Tommy. Ataulfo's aren't too bad and I've been trying to grow one because you can get fruit in about 3 years from seed.

    • @zengrow3098
      @zengrow3098 Před 4 lety

      @@PracticalPrimate yup that's the plan!

    • @Balmy_Jones
      @Balmy_Jones Před 4 lety +1

      Where are you located? Here in Lehigh Acres, FL some of my polyembryonic seedlings (thought to be Turpentine, but I could be wrong) get hit by Anthracnose and thus lack vigor, w/ some perishing. Just wondering if this is your problem with Ataulfo? My Valencia Pride from seed grown seedlings (monoembryonic) seem to thrive w/ no sign of Anthracnose. One seedling started producing nice large fruit within 4 years. The "Turpentine" seedlings that survive, get a Anthracnose resistant scion... and then thrive.

    • @zengrow3098
      @zengrow3098 Před 4 lety

      @@Balmy_Jones thanks for the reply, I'm in Southern California. Not sure if it's anthracnose but the seedlings get sick and die off on me. I managed to keep a Keitt seedling alive and it's thriving. I pulled it out of my worm bin. I wasn't planning on growing a Keitt since it will take longer for it to fruit but it's alive so I'm keeping it!

  • @user-et7br6ir1h
    @user-et7br6ir1h Před 7 měsíci

    Hair ready

  • @muqsitrather
    @muqsitrather Před měsícem +1

    Lakshay 1.0 attendance