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Identification of Woody Plants with Implanted Microchips

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"Secure identification of individual plants by some kind of labels in field plantings is an important part of many types of horticultural, plant, and ecological research. This report describes implanted microchips as one method of plant tagging that is reliable, durable and secure. This technology may be especially useful in long-term experiments involving perennial woody plants. Two methods are described for implanting microchips in citrus trees that would be applicable to other woody plant species. One method of implanting microchips is demonstrated to have no deleterious effect on citrus nursery tree growth through the first 18 months after implantation. Since microchips implanted beneath the bark will become more deeply imbedded in wood as plants grow, signal penetration through wood was evaluated and determined to be good enough for long-term field utility. Implanted microchips are noted to be potentially useful for secure tagging of valuable or endangered plant species to deter theft by providing secure and conclusive identification." [Abstract]

Authors
K.D. Bowman
Date Published
April 2005
Journal/Conference
HortTechnology
Publisher
American Society for Horticultural Science
Publisher Location
Alexandria, VA (US)
ISBN/ISSN
1063-0198
Volume/Issue/Number
15//
Start Page
352
End Page
354
Sub-Topics
Inventory (tree)
State(s)/Region(s)
National
Keywords
Citrus, Microchip, RFID
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