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Propagation guide

How to propagate Silkworm Mulberry (Morus bombycis) — step by step

Also called Silkworm Mulberry, Japanese Mulberry, Korean Mulberry.

The best way to propagate silkworm mulberry

The reliable, beginner-friendly way to propagate silkworm mulberry is seed (with cuttings or suckering as a shortcut where possible). It suits this species because of how it grows: deciduous tree; upright to spreading canopy with a moderately fast growth rate of 60–90 cm per year when young. Hardwood cuttings (30–40 cm) taken in late autumn root reliably under mist or in a sheltered cold frame. Softwood cuttings also succeed in early summer. Seed is viable but introduces genetic variability; stratify for 30–60 days at 4°C before sowing in spring. Grafting onto rootstocks is used commercially.

For the wider picture of which technique suits which plant, our guide to plant propagation methods compares water, soil, leaf, division and offset propagation side by side.

Step-by-step: propagating silkworm mulberry

  1. Start seed indoors. Sow silkworm mulberry seed into modules of fine compost 6–8 weeks before your last frost; keep at the right warmth until they germinate.
  2. Grow on. Give bright light, pot on as roots fill the cell, and harden off over a week before they go outside.
  3. Transplant out. Plant out only once the danger of frost has passed and the soil has warmed, at the spacing the crop needs.
  4. Cutting shortcut. Where the plant suckers or roots from a softwood shoot, rooting a cutting clones a favourite specimen and skips the seedling stage.
  5. Save your own seed. Let a strong, true-to-type plant set and ripen seed, then dry and store it cool and dark for next season.

The alternative method

If the main route does not suit your plant or setup, rooting a sucker / softwood cutting is the next best option for silkworm mulberry. Where the plant suckers or roots easily from a softwood shoot, a cutting clones a favourite specimen exactly and reaches a useful size faster than starting again from seed.

Timeline to roots

Realistically: seed to transplant in 4–8 weeks. These numbers assume spring or summer warmth and bright indirect light. In a cold, dark room — or in winter dormancy — the same silkworm mulberry propagation can take twice as long or stall completely, so do not panic if progress looks slow out of season. Patience beats poking: disturbing a forming root system to “check” on it is a common way to set it back.

Common failure points

When to do it

The best window is start indoors 6–8 weeks before last frost. Propagation is energetically expensive for a plant, and it only has the spare resources to build new roots when it is already growing actively, warm and well-lit. Out-of-season attempts are not pointless, but expect lower success and a longer wait.

Aftercare

Harden silkworm mulberry off over a week before planting out, water transplants in well, and protect them from late cold snaps. Steady moisture and the parent's light needs carry them through establishment. Match the parent's needs as the new silkworm mulberry settles: Requires full sun — at least 6–8 hours of direct sunlight daily. Adequate sun exposure is essential for flowering, fruit set, and development of the leaf quality valued in sericulture.

Silkworm Mulberry propagation — frequently asked questions

What is the best way to propagate silkworm mulberry?

Seed (with cuttings or suckering as a shortcut where possible) is the most reliable method for silkworm mulberry. Propagate silkworm mulberry mainly from seed — start it indoors 6–8 weeks before your last frost, or sow direct when soil warms. Where the plant suckers or roots from softwood, a cutting is a faster shortcut to a true-to-type clone of a favourite specimen.

Do you need a node to propagate silkworm mulberry?

For silkworm mulberry the rooting structure is seed (with cuttings or suckering as a shortcut where possible), so a classic "node" matters less than starting with the right plant material — Where the plant suckers or roots from softwood, a cutting is a faster shortcut to a true-to-type clone of a favourite specimen..

How long does it take silkworm mulberry to root?

Seed to transplant in 4–8 weeks. Timing varies with warmth and light — propagations move fastest in spring and summer when the plant is in active growth, and can stall almost completely in a cold, dark winter.

What is the best time of year to propagate silkworm mulberry?

Start indoors 6–8 weeks before last frost. Root and shoot development is metabolically demanding, so propagating during the active growing season gives noticeably higher success rates and faster results than attempting it in dormancy.

Can you propagate silkworm mulberry in water?

Where silkworm mulberry can be taken as a softwood cutting, that cutting can often be water-rooted; the main route, though, is seed sown into compost rather than water.

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