Vol. 6 No. 1 (2000)

Articles

The effect of the limitation of insect pollination period on the fruit set and yield of temperate-zone fruit tree species

Published February 23, 2000
Authors
P. Benedek
West Hungarian University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Mosonmagyaróvár, Hungary
, J. Nyéki
Debrecen University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Debrecen, Hungary
, M. Soltész
Highschool Faculty of Horticulture, University of Horticulture and Food Industry, Kecskemet, Hungary
, Z. Erdős
Fruit Research Institute, Cegléd, Hungary
, I. Skola
Fruit Research Institute, Cegléd, Hungary
, T. Szabó
Fruit Research Institute, Újfehértó, Hungary
, I. Amtmann
West Hungarian University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Mosonmagyaróvár, Hungary
, F. Bakcsa
West Hungarian University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Mosonmagyaróvár, Hungary
, G. Kocsisné Molnár
Veszprém University, Georgikon Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, H-8361 Keszthely
, Z. Vadas
West Hungarian University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Mosonmagyaróvár, Hungary
, Z. Szabó
Debrecen University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Debrecen, Hungary
View
Keywords
Insect pollination period limitation of bee pollination period self-sterile fruits self-fertile fruits apricot sour cherry plum apple pear quince
How to Cite
Selected stlye: APA
Benedek, P., Nyéki, J., Soltész, M., Erdős, Z., Skola, I., Szabó, T., Amtmann, I., Bakcsa, F., Kocsisné Molnár, G., Vadas, Z., & Szabó, Z. (2000). The effect of the limitation of insect pollination period on the fruit set and yield of temperate-zone fruit tree species. International Journal of Horticultural Science, 6(1), 90–95. https://doi.org/10.31421/IJHS/6/1/76
License

Copyright (c) 2018 International Journal of Horticultural Science

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

The duration of effective bee pollination period was limited by caging flowering branches for shorter or longer time in blooming fruit trees in a number of experiments during the past decades. In the case of self-sterile fruit species and cultivars (apples, pears, quinces, some plums, some sour cherries) even partial limitation of the effective duration of bee pollination period significantly reduced the fruit set and the yield. In the case of self-fertile apricots the effect of the total and also the influence of partial limitation of bee pollination period was the same as in the case of the mentioned self-sterile fruits. On the other hand, in the case of another self-fertile fruits (some plums, some sour cherries), the effect of partial limitation of bee pollination period was usually small, but complete (or incomplete but strong) limitation of be pollination usually resulted in a strong reduction of yield. This means that not only self-sterile but also self-fertile fruits clearly depend on insect (bee) pollination. This is because pollen dehiscence of anthers and the receptive period of stigmas do not overlap in time within the individual flowers. Stigmas in self-fertile trees, therefore, need pollen carried by bees from another flowers of the same tree (or compatible pollen from another trees). Accordingly, additional bee pollination (moving bee colonies to the orchards in flower) is needed to all kinds of temperate-zone fruit tree species when bee visitation of plantations is not abundant enough for some reasons.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...