To promote the growth and proliferation of in vitro rose (Rosa hybrida L) shoots, a liquid medium was added to shoot culture. Shoots were obtained by culturing internodes of four cultivars, 'Antique Curl', 'Shiny Orange', 'White Zen', and 'Red Zen', and then were proliferated by the subculture two times. An addition with 10~15 mL of liquid medium enhanced the shoot elongation of all four cultivars. However, the effect of liquid medium addition to culture of in vitro shoot for proliferation was dependent on cultivars of rose.
Using laser-ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), we evaluated the reliability of trace element abundance data measured from the silicate rock references of JR-3, JG-3, JGb-1 and JB-1b using glass discs made by alkali fusion. For 28 elements including rare earth elements, relative standard deviations (RSD) are better than 7% in case when the concentrations of the elements in the rock samples are greater than 10 ppm. However, RSD shows somewhat increased values for the concentrations less than 10 ppm, but never exceeds 25%. Compared with previously reported averages of the compiled abundance data, our data display satisfactory results for the most cases with differences less than 10%. We suggest that LA-ICP-MS analysis using fused glass beads is a reliable, precise and timesaving method of trace element analysis for the silicate rocks spanning from mafic to felsic compositions.
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