How does a plant respond if only 1% (or fewer) of its flowers pollinated?

Jim Haddar

New Member
My wife and I are wondering how it affects a plant if only a few of its pistils are pollinated. Does it cause the plant to finish flowering sooner? Does it affect the potency of the unpollinated buds? Will the plant stretch or stop getting taller? Does anyone even know?
 

Jim Haddar

New Member
My guess is that somehow the plant “knows” that it is “pregnant.” Chemical processes are being triggered and signals would be sent to other parts of the plant if a flower gets pollinated, I am thinking, but does it make a big difference for the average grower?
 

Jim Haddar

New Member
Each calyx is pollinated directly so only the flowers that have pollinated calyxes will develop seeds and, as far as I know, the rest of the plant will continue on as usual.
That’s more or less what I expected. It would probably take a hefty research grant and expensive academic infrastructure to know for certain. Probably not worth the expense and effort. Thanks.
 
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