I have been looking for information about how temperature affects cutting propagation success rates. you are the only one that's mentioned it in their comments about such techniques.Cut more cuttings to root and prepped them. Trying more species. Today it was pear , persimmon and silver maple. I have a seedling silver maple that has bronze fall color. It is likely mixed with Autum blaze. My method is 84 degrees and humidity in a plastic bag. Into the old cabinet incubator. I use rooting hormone. Temp and humidity is critical to rooting. I have viola up in outdoor pots. I have old seed up sowed on 3/26. Another batch on 3/29. 9 1/2 year old tomato seed.
Thank you very much!
But can I ask for you to elaborate more?
Example; I did cutting propagation a few times. It worked. But I did it with the stuff inside the kitchen window at 70 to 75 degrees. Its 95+ right now...
I'm thinking high temperatures it probably would have a lower success rate? But I do hope to sort of confirm this. And I don't necessarily want to waste a lot of effort when others might have tested temperature ranges already... ?
You said you did 84 degrees tops... did you also try other temperature ranges? Working at 84 degrees is pretty specific. So its valuable you said that. But I also wonder if that would have to vary on different garden vegetable or berry species? Would success rates at a 75 degree temperature be higher than an 85 degree temperature?
Thanks very much.