self-pollination
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Assorted References
- major reference
- In pollination: Types: self-pollination and cross-pollination
An egg cell in an ovule of a flower may be fertilized by a sperm cell derived from a pollen grain produced by that same flower or by another flower on the same plant, in either of which two cases fertilization is…
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- In pollination: Types: self-pollination and cross-pollination
- plant breeding
- In plant breeding: Mating systems
A flower is self-pollinated (a “selfer”) if pollen is transferred to it from any flower of the same plant and cross-pollinated (an “outcrosser” or “outbreeder”) if the pollen comes from a flower on a different plant. About half of the more important cultivated plants are naturally cross-pollinated, and…
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- In plant breeding: Mating systems
occurrence in
- Fabales
- In Fabales: Characteristic morphological features
…do not open, thus enforcing self-pollination (cleistogamous). In the chasmogamous flowers, the sepals are most commonly partly fused, and the five petals alternate in position with the sepals. There are commonly 10 stamens, but there may be fewer or more. The stamens may remain free or they may be fused…
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- In Fabales: Characteristic morphological features
- flowers
- In flower: Pollination
…chief kinds of pollination: (1) self-pollination, the pollination of a stigma by pollen from the same flower or another flower on the same plant; and (2) cross-pollination, the transfer of pollen from the anther of a flower of one plant to the stigma of the flower of another plant of…
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- In flower: Pollination
- Kallstroemia
- In Zygophyllales: Zygophyllaceae
…placed onto the stigma, effecting self-pollination. This is a remarkable instance in which seed formation is ensured by self-pollination if necessary, but cross-pollination is first attempted. This is an important adaptation in a genus of plants growing in arid areas where their pollinators might not be present or abundant.
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- In Zygophyllales: Zygophyllaceae
- orchids
- In orchid: Natural history
Self-pollination occurs in a significant number of orchids. Several degrees of this phenomenon may be found in a single genus, from species in which accidental self-pollination results in fertilization to those in which the flowers never open, yet are capable of producing fertile seed. In…
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- In orchid: Natural history