The work of a breakthrough Vietnamese graduate student in Australia
A scientific project that has been evaluated as breakthrough in the past 30 years in the field of industry and environment, has just been implemented by Vietnamese graduate student Cao Dinh Hung. It is an artificial method of 'New Style' to produce tropical hardwood varieties, giving tens of millions of times higher efficiency than conventional methods.
The ' New Type ' artificial method for producing hardwood charcoal varieties is an easy-to-implement propagation method that is much simpler than the current plant regeneration method. Besides, the execution time is much shorter.
With conventional breeding method, a seed can only multiply 100 trees in a year but with the artificial method ' New style ' studied by Cao Dinh Hung, it is possible to propagate 10 million plants / year. Meanwhile, half of the treatment in the laboratory is reduced and the care is taken care of after propagation.
Cao Dinh Hung is introducing students to " New " nuclear technology.
at the laboratory of the Sunshine Coast University - Australia
The advantages of 'cloning' vegetative cloning have been applied to practicality, quickly establishing new forests effectively.
The ' New ' artificial particle technology of graduate student Cao Dinh Hung allowed to produce about 10 million artificial seeds from hybrid eucalyptus and 6 million mahogany seeds per year from an original seed of each tree type.
Associate Professor Stephen Trueman, botany major of Sunshine Coast University (Australia) where Cao Dinh Hung is doing a PhD student in the country's Plant Journal: This is an important breakthrough within 30 last year in industry and environment. The propagation of tropical hardwoods has solved the problem of tree regeneration that difficult or implemented clonal cloning methods are not effective.
PhD student Cao Dinh HungCao Đình Hùng was born in 1974 in Thừa Thiên Huế. Graduated from Hue University of Science to get good grade in 1996, a year later he graduated from Hue University of Education. Since 1998, he has worked at the Central Highlands Institute of Biology. In 2004 Cao Dinh Hung went to study in Australia. Currently, he is a graduate student at the Sunshine Coast University.
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