Pollen sits on the anther, but the egg waits inside the pistil. Somehow the pollen must travel to the stigma — and nature has clever ways to move it.
- Pollination is the transfer of pollen grains from the anther to the stigma of a flower.
- It is essential for the formation of fruits and seeds .
- It happens through various strategies provided by nature.
In this Activity, we will investigate the role of pollination by covering pea flowers and comparing fruit formation.
- Identify sweet pea (matar) plants in a garden or field.
- Select two juvenile flower buds and three freshly blossomed flowers on the same plant.
- Remove the stamens from one bud and one open flower.
- Loosely wrap muslin cloth bags around the bud, the bud with stamens removed, the flower with stamens removed and a freshly blossomed flower; leave one open flower uncovered.
- Observe fruit development, then note your observations in Table 11.2.
| Treatments | Flower bud (wrapped with muslin cloth bag) | Flower bud with removed stamens (wrapped with muslin cloth bag) | Flower with removed stamens (wrapped with muslin cloth bag) | Flower (wrapped with muslin cloth bag) | Flower (without muslin cloth bag) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fruit formation (Yes/No) |
- In self-pollination , pollen reaches the stigma of the same flower or another flower of the same plant (Fig. 11.13).
- In cross-pollination , pollen is transferred from a flower of one plant to the stigma of a flower of another plant of the same type.
- Both deliver pollen to the stigma, but cross-pollination mixes characters from two different plants.