Effect of water soaking and rooting substrates on the rooting development of salakhani pomegranate hardwood cuttings
Iman J. B. Hawrami, M. M. A. Qadir, R. R. Aziz

TL;DR
This study investigates how soaking duration and different rooting substrates affect the rooting and shoot development of Salakhani pomegranate hardwood cuttings, finding optimal conditions for propagation success.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the combined effects of soaking time and substrate type on pomegranate cutting propagation, identifying optimal conditions for rooting and growth.
Findings
Sand substrate yields highest rooting percentage (75.56%)
24-hour soaking combined with sand achieves 93.33% rooting
48-hour soaking in peat moss results in no rooting
Abstract
This study was carried out to evaluated the effects of soaking duration and rooting substrate on the root and shoot development of Salakhani pomegranate hardwood cuttings. The experiment was conducted at Darbandikhan Technical Institute, Sulaimani Polytechnic University, Iraq, from February to June 2025. The results showed that soaking duration had significant effect on rooting percentage, while the highest rooting percentage (60%) was obtained from the non-soaked cuttings, but prolonged soaking (48 h) resulted in the lowest rooting percentage (33.33%). Rooting substrate had a significant impact, with sand showing superior performance (75.56%) compared to the mixture (46.67%) and peat moss alone (20%). Moreover, the interactions between soaking duration and substrate revealed that soaking for 24 hours combined with sand yielded the highest rooting percentage (93.33%), while 48-hour…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant tissue culture and regeneration · Pomegranate: compositions and health benefits · Plant Disease Management Techniques
