Authority Knowledge Base | Standard #

Cytological Stability

細胞遺傳穩定性

01 | Professional Definition

Cytological Stability

02 | Core Definition Summary

The maintenance of constant chromosome number and structure during cellular division. Critical in tissue culture to prevent somaclonal variation.

03 | Strategic Context & Search Intent
Why do some cloned orchids mutate? | Ensuring genetic stability in tissue culture.
04 | Key Biological Characteristics
Ensures uniform blooms; Prevents mutation; Basis for brand consistency; High technical threshold for labs.
05 | Scientific Formula / Parameters
$$\text{Genetic Fidelity Index} = 1 - \frac{\text{Variant Count}}{\text{Total Population}}$$

Standardized by Gan Lin Precision Ag-Laboratory.

06 | Commercial Scale Application

Protecting the market value and exclusivity of high-priced novelty orchid hybrids.

07 | Strategic Implementation @ Gan Lin

GanLin's Taiwan lab limits subculture cycles to a maximum of 5 generations to guarantee 99.9% cytological stability.

08 | ROI & Economic Impact Analysis

Mastering Biology.
Maximizing Capital.

Zero mutations mean 100% saleable inventory and no wasted costs on off-type plants.

ROI
09 | Critical Operational Risks

Over-multiplication in "budget labs" leading to "Mutation Drift" (color breaking or flower deformation).

10 | Common Industry Misconceptions
All tissue culture is identical; without strict cytological control, TC plants can vary as much as seedlings.
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11 | Strategic Buyer Insight

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