FREITAS, L. AND M. SAZIMA (Departamento de Botanica, Caixa Postal 6109, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 13083-970 Campinas, Sao Paulo, Brasil). Daily blooming pattern and pollination by syrphids in Sisyrinchium vaginatum (Iridaceae) in southeastern Brazil. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 130: 55-61. 2003.-Flowers of Sisyrinchium are regarded as fugacious and bee-pollinated. We report a species of this genus bearing flowers that last 1 to 4 days, and are mainly pollinated by hoverflies. Floral biology, daily blooming pattern, floral longevity, and frequency and behavior of pollinators of Sisyrinchium vaginatum were studied in a high-altitude grassland in the Serra da Bocaina, southeastern Brazil. Anthesis starts between 10:00 and 16:30 h, but most flowers open in the middle of the day. Flowers open and close every day, or may remain closed on their second day of anthesis, to then re-open the subsequent day. The regulation of flower longevity and blooming pattern seems to be endogenous, but climatic conditions and pollinator activity may also be involved. As a floral reward, the yellow, dish-shaped flowers only offer pollen. Although small bees were reported as the main or exclusive pollinators for other areas, syrphids were the main pollinators of S. vaginatum in the Serra da Bocaina. For this population, the flowering peak occurred during the winter, while for populations of other areas it took place during the summer. Since, in winter, the diversity and number of small bees is extremely reduced in those highaltitude grasslands, the syrphid-pollination in the Bocaina's population is probably linked to its flowering peak in that season.