Abstract

Comparisons of pollinator efficacy using pollen received on stigmas can be refined by incorporating experimental dose–response relationships for pollen deposition and fruiting responses. A range of discrete pollen doses applied to cranberry stigmas resulted in decelerating curvilinear responses for fruiting, berry size, and seed set. Minimum thresholds and maximum asymptotes bounded reproductive responses to incremental stigmatic pollen loads. Four bee species were compared for their pollination efficacies on commercial cranberries, using counts of pollen received by stigmas during single bee visits to previously virgin flowers. Differences between these bee species were found to be exaggerated when raw pollen counts were used for comparison because foragers of some species often delivered pollen in excess of that needed to maximize fruit and seed production. Sixfold differences between species in mean pollen deposition translated into 1.5–2‐fold differences in predicted cranberry fruit set and size. Implications for pollen tube competition and agricultural production are discussed.

Keywords

PollenBiologyPollinatorPollinationEricaceaeHand-pollinationBotanyVacciniumPollen tubePollen sourceHorticulture

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Publication Info

Year
2003
Type
article
Volume
90
Issue
10
Pages
1425-1432
Citations
105
Access
Closed

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James H. Cane, D. E. Schiffhauer (2003). Dose‐response relationships between pollination and fruiting refine pollinator comparisons for cranberry (<i>Vaccinium macrocarpon</i> [Ericaceae]). American Journal of Botany , 90 (10) , 1425-1432. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.90.10.1425

Identifiers

DOI
10.3732/ajb.90.10.1425