Abstract

A series of hand‐pollination experiments was performed to test the hypothesis that pollination timing determines which flowers produce pods in Asclepias speciosa, a species with few ovaries maturing into fruit. A comparison of fruiting of different aged ovaries showed that throughout anthesis, pistils are equally receptive to pollen tube penetration and growth. Pollen declines in vigor as flowers age as indicated by comparisons of different aged pollen both in vitro and in vivo. However, the overall effect of this decline on fruiting in the field is lessened by a simultaneous decline during anthesis in the rate of pollinium removal by insect pollinators. Within an umbel, earlier pollinated flowers are more likely to form mature pods than flowers pollinated 2 days later, apparently as a result of within umbel competition between developing pods for limited resources. The longer the delay between pollinations within umbels, the more mature pods form, probably as a result of a decline in intensity of competition between pods. Pollinations during the afternoon result in fewer mature pods and seeds than morning and evening pollinations, although fruiting is not dependent on humidity or temperature at the time of pollination. Differences in mature pod production between treatments were not significant for any experiment indicating that ecological or evolutionary factors other than pollination timing have the greatest effect on fruiting.

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