News
Wind-pollinated plants produce light pollen grains that are released into the air and drift in the wind. The goal is for the pollen to blow around and eventually land on the pistil of other ...
Wind-pollinated plants produce light pollen grains that are released into the air and drift in the wind. The goal is for the pollen to blow around and eventually land on the pistil of other ...
Hosted on MSN1mon
Don’t Blame The Bees: Wind-Blown Pollen Is Likely What’s Making Your Allergies Worse - MSNThe Wind? Yes, the wind. As pollination ecologist Christine Cairns Fortuin explains, trees and plants have two different ways of distributing their pollen.The first is what many of us are most ...
The wind picks up these tiny grains and carries them to other plants, often over great distances. Insects like bees, butterflies, and moths are especially important for pollination, as they are ...
The Red Maple, Juniper and Elm trees are wind pollinated. “The problem with our tree pollen is most trees are wind pollinated, not insect pollinated,” Patton explained.
Pollen from wind-pollinated trees trigger allergies. Credit : Getty. Up to 40 percent of people suffer from springtime allergies—and the culprit is more irritating than ever, ...
Wind is not an efficient pollinator, however. The probability of one pollen grain landing in the right location — the stigma or ovule of another plant of the same species — is infinitesimally ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results