Diurnal Patterns of Pollen Emission in Ambrosia, Phleum, Zea, and Ricinus
Title | Diurnal Patterns of Pollen Emission in Ambrosia, Phleum, Zea, and Ricinus |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 1969 |
Authors | Ogden, EC, Hayes, JV |
Journal | American Journal of Botany |
Volume | 56 |
Pagination | 16-21 |
Keywords | biology |
Abstract | Hourly measu rements of pollen emission were made from cultivated plots of Ambrosia, Phleum, Zea, and Ricinus over the course of several pollination seasons as part of a study of pollen dispersion from known sources. A characteristic diurnal emission pattern was found for each genus Ambrosia pollen emission normally begins an hour or two after sunrise, peaks a few hours later, and decreases through the afternoon. Phleum starts during the night, peaks about 2 hr after sunrise, and declines slowly through the day. Zea emits pollen fairly uniformly during the period from 2 hr after sunrise to about sunset, while Ricinus pollen was collected from several hours after sunrise to late afternoon with a peak in mid-morning. Daily patterns often vary from the seasonal mean in response to changing meteorological conditions.
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URL | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2440389 |