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Pollination

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Learn how pollination & fertilization occur in plants ... A honeybee's work is nectar and pollen collection as food, and moving pollen for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pollination


1
Pollination Fertilization
  • The Birds the Bees, or
  • The Bees the Wind!

2
Objectives
  • Learn how pollination fertilization occur in
    plants
  • Learn factors the affect successful pollination
    fertilization
  • Consider ways horticulturists increase the
    likelihood of successful pollination
    fertilization

3
Pollination Fertilization
  • Critical processes in fruit and seed production
    (2nd 3rd steps) (remember flowering was the
    1st step)
  • Note
  • seed development triggers fruit
    development!

4
Steps in the Process
1.Anthesis (pollen shed)
Pollen grain of carnation
5
Anthesis
  • Pollen produced in great excess
  • Example apple flower
  • 20 anthers
  • 3,500 pollen grains / anther
  • 70,000 pollen grains / flower
  • 5 stigmas / flower each with 2 ovules
  • Approx. 7,000 pollen grains / ovule

6
Steps in the Process
2.Pollination (pollen transfer to a stigma)
to other flowers
1.Anthesis (pollen shed)
Stigma of carnation
Pollen on stigma
7
Pollination (pollen transfer)
  • Within same flower or same plant - self
    pollination
  • Examples tomato, peach, pea
  • Between differing plants - cross pollination
  • Examples apple, sweet cherry

8
Cross Pollination - Vectors
  • Wind
  • Examples many trees (walnut, pecan, hazelnut,
    birch) grasses (sweet corn) - not showy flowers
  • Extreme excess pollen production
  • Hazelnut 250,000 pollen grains / ovule (remember
    apple - 7,000 / ovule)
  • For seed production - 1 mile isolation needed
  • Examples beet, corn, spinach

9
Cross Pollination - Vectors
  • Insects
  • Examples most fruits and vegetables - showy
    flowers, scent, nectar to attract insects
  • A honeybees work is nectar and pollen collection
    as food, and moving pollen for the plant is
    unintentional
  • For seed production - 1/4 mile isolation needed

10
Steps in the Process
2.Pollination (pollen transfer to a stigma)
to other flowers
1.Anthesis (pollen shed)
3.Pollen germination (on stigma)
Germinating pollen on carnation stigma
11
Pollen Germination
  • Pollen grain is hydrated (moistened) on the
    stigmatic surface
  • Pollen grain contains
  • One nucleus that is the tube nucleus
  • One nucleus that will divide as the tube grows
  • Germ tube begins to grow toward ovary

12
Pollen Germination
Germinating pollen on a stigma
Germinating pollen with germ tube and nuclei
apparent
13
Steps in the Process
2.Pollination (pollen transfer to a stigma)
to other flowers
1.Anthesis (pollen shed)
3.Pollen germination (on stigma)
4.Growth of germ tube to ovary
14
Germ tube growth
  • Tube grows between ( through) style cells
  • Style tissue secretes compounds that influence
    tube growth (faster/slower)
  • Nuclear division occurs
  • Generative nucleus divides as tube grows and
    becomes two sperm nuclei that will fuse with
    different parts of the ovule

15
Steps in the Process
2.Pollination (pollen transfer to a stigma)
to other flowers
1.Anthesis (pollen shed)
3.Pollen germination (on stigma)
4.Growth of germ tube to ovary
5.Fertilization of ovule
16
Fertilization
1
  • Germ tube enters embryo sac
  • One sperm nucleus fuses with egg to become
    embryo, other fuses with polar nuclei to
    become endosperm (food storage)

3
2
Embryo sac
3
2
1
Second sperm nucleus
17
What Can Go Wrong?
  • Achieve pollination but failure of fertilization
  • Failure to achieve pollination

18
Failure of Fertilization even with Successful
Pollination
  • Self-incompatibility (self-sterility)
  • A plant may be an obligate outcrosser
  • Thus, its own pollen will not achieve
    fertilization
  • How is fertilization prevented? Chemical
    interaction between pollen and pistil.
  • Pollen doesnt germinate on stigma
  • Germ tube grows some and stops part way
  • Germ tube grows too slow

19
Failure of Pollination/Fert.
  • Temperature
  • Freeze during flowering can kill flowers
  • Low temperature slows insect pollinators
  • Low temperature slows germ tube growth
  • Wind
  • Reduces bee flight

20
Failure of Pollination/Fert.
  • Rain
  • Can prevent pollen shed, or movement, especially
    in wind pollinated species
  • Reduces bee flight
  • Washes off stigmatic secretions - can reduce
    pollen adherance to stigma and pollen germination

21
Failure of Pollination
  • Low population of pollinators
  • Natural insect populations may be too low
  • Habitat destruction
  • Disease, pests (mites)
  • Fruit and vegetable growers often bring in hives
    of honeybees during crop flowering
  • Competition for insects from other flowers
  • Avoid weediness

22
A Horticultural Example
  • P F is a critical aspect of fruit production
  • In Indiana and many areas in the temperate
    region, a major fruit crop is apples.
  • P F in orchards may determine whether a grower
    has a profitable year or a not so profitable one.

23
Apple orchard pollination
  • Apples require cross pollination
  • Careful selection of pollen provider trees is
    necessary
  • Pollen providers called pollenizers
  • Not all apple cultivars produce pollen that will
    fertilize all other apple cultivars
  • Example Winesap pollen is sterile

24
Pollenizer Selection
  • Bloom time of pollenizer must overlap bloom time
    of crop producer
  • Other apple cultivars as pollenizers allow for
    harvestable yield
  • Crabapples sometimes used as pollenizers

25
Pollenizer Location
  • Every third tree of every third row
  • X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
  • X P X X P X X P X X P X X P
  • X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
  • X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
  • X P X X P X X P X X P X X P
  • X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
  • X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
  • X P X X P X X P X X P X X P

26
Pollenizer Location
  • Alternate rows, alternate double rows
  • Every fifth row

MacIntosh MacIntosh Red Delicious Red
Delicious MacIntosh MacIntosh Red Delicious Red
Delicious
Red Delicious Red Delicious Red Delicious Red
Delicious Red Delicious MacIntosh Red
Delicious Red Delicious
27
Summary
  • Pollenization fertilization are multi-step,
    complex processes, affected by many internal
    externals factors.
  • Understanding the factors allows horticulturists
    to influence P F.
  • Reading for next lecture
  • pp11-16, 58, 148-149
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