DocumentCode
2771506
Title
Automated micro-propagation of plant material
Author
Sobey, Peter J. ; Harter, Bernd ; Hinsch, Andrew
Author_Institution
ForBio Robotics Pty Ltd., Coorparoo DC, Qld., Australia
fYear
1997
fDate
23-25 Sep 1997
Firstpage
60
Lastpage
65
Abstract
This paper describes the development of the first commercial automated tissue culture robot (the VitronTM 501) by the Australian company ForBio Robotics. The purpose of the robot is to automate the cloning of plant material in a sterile environment, a process that is entirely manual at the present time. The robotic process mimics the manual process and involves harvesting a small (6 cm) plant from a tray, cutting it into a number of smaller viable explants and planting these into fresh trays of nutrient medium. This must all be done under sterile conditions. ForBio has identified agro-forestry for pulp and timber products as a large enough market to warrant the cost of automation. Target species include eucalypts, acacia, teak and pine
Keywords
forestry; robots; ForBio Robotics; Vitron 501; acacia; agro-forestry; automated micro-propagation; automated tissue culture robot; eucalypts; nutrient medium; pine; plant cloning; plant material; sterile environment; teak; Australia; Automatic control; Biological materials; Cloning; Costs; Genetics; Joining materials; Laboratories; Optical propagation; Robotics and automation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Mechatronics and Machine Vision in Practice, 1997. Proceedings., Fourth Annual Conference on
Conference_Location
Toowoomba, Qld.
Print_ISBN
0-8186-8025-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MMVIP.1997.625249
Filename
625249
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