Methods are described for obtaining explants which produce adventitious shoots, for subsequent stimulation of rooting and then transplanting using six commercial sugar-beet cultivars. The rate of adventitious shoot regeneration from petioles or intact leaf explants was affected by the source of donor plants, cytokinin type (BAP or Kin) and concentration and cultivar. Increasing the sucrose concentration of the medium from 3% to 5% or 8% had no apparent effect. Adventitious shoots could be produced directly from callus formed on the base of the petioles. In general adventitious shoots were produced on either the concave surface of the petiole or from the callus, occasionally simultaneously on both, and on the convex surface of the petiole in intact leaf explants. The highest rooting rate with 3% sucrose and 1.0 mg l-1 NAA was obtained using half-strength MS medium. There was considerable variation in the propagules from petioles or callus indicating that this system may provide valuable somaclonal variation.