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Flowering phenology in species of Chamaecrista (L.) Moench: temporal generation of functionally enantiostylous dimorphic individuals.

Bezerra TT, Silva AL, da Silva Aragão JL, Matias R, Almeida NM

Pollinators

Watch a patch of partridge peas closely enough and you'll catch individual plants flipping which way their flowers curve from one day to the next — a built-in trick to dodge self-fertilization that plays out right in front of you.

Some flowers have a curved style — the part that receives pollen — that can bend either left or right, and some plants produce both types. Scientists found that while a whole group of these plants keeps a roughly 50/50 balance of left- and right-curving flowers, individual plants don't stay balanced day to day — they switch back and forth. This daily alternating seems to be a clever way the plant avoids fertilizing itself with its own pollen, keeping genetic diversity high.

Key Findings

1

Across four Chamaecrista species, populations maintained a near 1:1 ratio of left- and right-styled flowers over two full flowering seasons.

2

Individual plants frequently showed unbalanced morph ratios on any given day, with C. diphylla, C. rotundifolia, and C. flexuosa showing significantly more days with unbalanced ratios than C. ramosa.

3

Daily alternation of flower morph within individuals functions like a temporal form of dimorphism, potentially reducing self-pollination (geitonogamy) and promoting cross-pollination between differently styled flowers.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Researchers discovered that individual plants of four Chamaecrista species alternate the direction of their flower styles day by day, even though the overall population maintains a balanced mix. This daily switching may help prevent self-pollination and encourage cross-pollination between plants.

description

Abstract Preview

Enantiostyly is a floral polymorphism that favours cross-pollination and genetic diversity. It is characterized by flowers with styles curved to the right or to the left. The factors that regulate ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 13 other discoveries — Partridge Pea, Sensitive Pea, Sleeping Plant pollinators, phenology, native-plants +2 more 5 related articles

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