Showing posts with label pollination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pollination. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2013

The Bees, the Pollinators


At the side of my house there grows a wild fast growing but rather small size tree with a soft wood called “mansanitas” or small apple. But its fruit is in no way related to the real apple. It has very small succulent fruit with many soft seeds and a skin that is colored red to purple when ripe. Although the fruit is sweet and edible, it is mostly a treat for animals. Only few kids eat the fruits as a sort of playful activity rather than to fill themselves with it. Adults completely ignore the fruit.






Because of its flowers, the tree has attracted insects particularly bees that search for foods. Bees and other insects are some of the agents of pollination. Others include man, rain and wind. The bees in the tree are busy particularly in the morning when they fly into flower and sip its nectar. Pollen grains stick to a bee's legs and body as it brushes the anther of the flower. As the bees fly from one flower to another some of the pollen are dropped into the stigma of a flower. A tube then grows down from the stigma into the ovule. This will cause the ovary of the flower to be fertilized by the male cells that comes from the pollen. Fertilized ovary grows in size and develops into a fruit.




In most cases the pollen of a flower is transferred by the bees to another flower of the same plant or to another flower of another plant of the same species. A fruit that develops in the latter situation will have a healthy offspring. A flower that is fertilized by its own pollen or a flower that is fertilized from pollen of another flower of the same plant could result in an inferior seeds or offspring that are incapable of surviving a harsh environment or weather. Some plants have a built in system to prevent self pollination by having stigmas that reject pollen coming from the same flower.







Some plants that are very small like grasses are pollinated by the wind. Dry minute pollen of some grasses are blown away and fertilize the ovule of flower of other distant grasses of the same species.

Plants make themselves conspicuous with their beautiful colored flowers to attract pollinators. Other plants that have dull colored flowers make up for their deficiencies by emitting a fragrant scent especially in the evening. That kind of plants will give a nice ambiance at night with their pleasant smell so that it seems that the surrounding is sprayed with perfume.




The scene of the tree by my house is a sort of community of several species of animals that share a common purpose to sustain themselves. The process of pollination is a way on which the bees can feed themselves and produce their own offspring. For the tree, it is a means by which it can reproduce itself when fruits are developed as a result of pollination. Discarded seeds are scattered on the ground after the fruits are consumed by man and animals. The seeds in turn develop into new plants thus continuing the tree’s life cycle.  Because of pollination man and animals are able to have foods such as vegetables and fruits. Without it they could not have sustained their life on earth.


Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Tropical Orchids


Orchid is a common name of orchidales, a monocot that composed one of the biggest groups of flowering plants. It is a perennial herb that grows in tropical regions of Asia, South and Central America except in Antarctica and the dessert zones of the world. The orchid has over 400 to 800 genera and about 15,000 to 35,000 species.

Orchids have narrow foliage leaves and parallel veins. The vascular tissues are scattered at random throughout the stem and they lack stem cambium that actively divide cells that produced woods. Some leaves of orchids are ovate, others are lanceolate and still others are nearly circular and they are very variable in size. Most of the flower consists of 3 outside sepals and three inside petals. Mostly, all of the sepals and petals of a species are of the same color and shape, and they are collectively called tepals. One of the inner tepals looks distinctly different from the rest. It is lobed or cup shaped and is called labellium which is virtually the landing platform of pollinators. Orchids have only one stamen and pistil, the sex organs of the flowers which are fused together into a structure called the column.

In their natural habitats most orchids are epiphytic which means that they are aerial plant that uses the branch or the trunk of other plants for support only and not for their nutrients. They obtain their water from trapped rain water and moisture in the air and the foods from the organic material that accumulated in the branch or stem of the plants where they cling to. Since they have green leaves, orchids process their foods through photosynthesis. Most of the species however are not tolerant of excessive sunlight. Some species of orchids are parasitic and get their nutrients from their host plant. Others are saprophytic and get their foods from decaying vegetation.                  

Pollinators such as moths, butterflies, bees, and others are attracted to the color, color patterns and shapes or orchid flowers. Fertilized ovary contains ovules that mature into small seeds. As many as 2 million seeds can be produced from a single seedpod.

In the Philippines the most popular specie is Waling Waling or Vanda Sanderiana which is considered the queen of Philippine flowers.  It is used to breed about 80% species of Vanda orchids in the world.

Not satisfied with the quality of flowers of natural orchids, horticulturists have developed more species of orchids through hybridization thus improving the quality of orchid species. Growers get financial benefits from orchids by selling the flowers or the plants. Most orchids are now domesticated and people plant them to decorate their yard or add them to their garden. Orchids can easily adapt to an environment that is simulated to their natural habitat. A species of tropical orchid that is grown for its economic value is the Vanilla Planifolia. The extract of the seedpod of vanilla is commercially produced to flavor cakes, ice cream and other foods.

Waling Waling, the queen of Philippine flowers




                           




              







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