Hi,
I tried an air layer this year on a Japanese maple for the first time this year. I made the cut in late June and wrapped it in moss. I did not put any rooting hormone on it b/c some have said it is unnecessary. As you can see it calloused but did not produce any roots. I have heard that Japanese maples are pretty easy to air layer so I was wondering if anyone could tell me what I did wrong.
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By the way... the part of the trunk beneath the airlayer girdle looks black(?) What happened there? Did you separate the airlayer before it had rooted?
I agree with gergwebber - you can treat the failed air-layer as a big cutting and see what happens. You never know...
Eland, I've been successfully air-layering JMs for several years now. I had the good fortune that my first attempts were wildly successful. Since then, I've come across puzzling and frustrating problems. I've still got an air-layer on an 'Aka Shigatatsu sawa', for example, that I girdled 3 seasons ago. I've recut it (i.e., removed the old callus) and I've used different strengths of rooting hormones to no avail. I am still in denial of the facts that rooting initials simply will not form on some species/varieties/cultivars when they are beyond a certain ontological age. But it seems to be a fact, just as the scholarly literature says.
I've also never succeeded air-layering my JM 'Higasayama'. I've tried repeately and every time the layer dies before roots are sufficiently developed, regardless of whether I used a rooting hormone powder or the strength (i.e., NAA/IBA concentration) I used. Everything seems to be going swimmingly until late August to early September and suddenly (in the span of less than a week) leaves are turning brown progressively upward from immediately above the girdle. Below the girdle, the bark has turned black just like yours did, eland. This is just die-back.
In many respects it is surprising that all air-layers don't fail this way. Among other things, auxin signals that the branch is alive. The layer girdle interrupts the auxin flow so there is none until contibuted by some foliage below the girdle. In this simple view it would seem that the cambium between that lower foliage and the bottom of the girdle should always die because there is no auxin (flow), yet this doesn't usually happen (except on my Higasayama). I've spent most of the last year trying to figure out what the additional signal is that keeps this 'auxin-free' cambium alive, but I still don't know how the tree "decided" to kill the branch. Nevertheless, you can see this in the first of the attached photos.
The other part of my 'mystery' and possibly yours too, eland, is why the foliage suddely goes brown. After all the xylem supplies water and nutrients and clearly it is still there. On the other hand, xylem is just a (Ted Stevens-esque) series of tubes - it doesn't take much to clog them up. I sectioned one of my recent Higasayama suicides and indeed there is a discoloration in the xylem that probably indicates the CODIT action (e.g., tyloses) that would go with the die-back. So, I rather suspect your branch/layer has the same. It might root as a cutting as is. Likewise if it is still on the tree, or just toss it; you can leave layers on trees through the winter, but in this case, it will simply be a dead twig/branch in the spring.
I still find air-layering to be an entertaining and educational adjuct to bonsai. I am going to air-layer my Higasayama again this next season but a little bit differently. I plan to dissolve some 1.6% IBA powder in an equal volume of water (making 8000 ppm) and then work this into a lanolin paste that I will 'paint' on the bottom of the girdle (while doing everything else in the same way). This ought to give an auxin flow into that cambium and, and thereby, avert air-layer suicide from recurring. Still I would like to know why this isn't always a problem.