All About Cross-Pollination: Why it Matters in Your Garden (2024)

If you've ever planted a saved seed and grown a fruit or vegetable that looks nothing like the one the seed came from, what you've grown is called a hybrid. The flower on the original plant was fertilized by a different species through a process called cross-pollination.

What Is Cross Pollination?

Cross-pollination occurs when pollen from one flower reaches the pistils of another flower.This plant therefore "pollinated" another plant, and the genetic material will combine. When seeds of this plant are saved and regrown, a hybrid is produced.

Your hybrid plant is probably an accident of nature, but intentionally crossing species to create plants with tastier fruit, bigger blooms, different colors, and other desirable characteristics is a big part of gardening culture.

For the home grower, understanding cross-pollination helps you plan a garden that's going to stay consistent with your intent.

What Is Cross-Pollination?

Understanding cross-pollination helps to know how plants reproduce through flower, fruit, and seed development. Flowers can be complete, which means they have both male and female parts, or they can be incomplete with only the male (stamen) or female (pistil) parts.

For plants with incomplete flowers, fertilization occurs when insects or wind carry pollen from the stamen of a male flower to the pistil of a female flower. The pollen is captured at the top of the pistil (the stigma) and drops down to fertilize the ovule, which develops into a fruit or a seed.

The mixing of different characteristics occurs during seed development, and all flowering and cone-producing plants can cross-pollinate by natural or mechanical methods. This happens with plants in the same genus with some more vulnerable than others. It is rare for plants in different genera to cross-pollinate.

Certain fruits and vegetables are more vulnerable to cross-pollination, which makes saving seeds a wasted effort. Others with seeds as the edible portion, like sweet corn, can cross-pollinate to produce a variety entirely different than what you planted.

Squash Plants

Some plants produce both incomplete male and female flowers on a single plant, and these are types likely to cross-pollinate. A honeybee visits a male flower on a zucchini plant, picking up grains of pollen from the stamen. Then, she flies off to the female flower of a butternut squash growing nearby. Once there, zucchini pollen falls off her body onto the butternut flower stigma. The resulting fruit will still be butternut squash, but the seeds inside it develop combined characteristics of both zucchini and butternut squash to produce a cross or hybrid.

Sweet Corn

Sweet corn is an example of how cross-pollination can alter the ear, which is the part we eat. If you plant a sweet yellow variety next to a sweet white variety, there's a good possibility both crops will produce mixed ears. Sweet corn also cross-pollinates with field corn, resulting in a tough, chewy vegetable and a ruined crop.

Trees and Shrubs

Many fruit trees and shrubs that produce berries require two plants of the same type or a second plant of a different species to form fruit, since many fruit plants are unable to self-pollinate. Two plants increase the chance for fruit with more flowers maturing at different times.

For example, holly shrubs develop only male or female flowers pollinated by bees. Two are needed, one male and one female, for the female shrub to produce berries. Pawpaws have complete flowers but the female (stigma) matures before the male (stamen) produces pollen. By the time pollen is available, the stigma is no longer receptive or able to use for fertilization.

Explaining Self-Pollination vs. Cross-Pollination

Self-pollinating plants produce complete flowers with both male and female parts in each bloom. Cross-pollination is still possible, but less likely because both reproductive parts are available in all the flowers on the plant and in close proximity.

Self-pollinating vegetables include beans, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, corn, kohlrabi, onions, and peppers.

If you've saved seed from an heirloom tomato you plan to grow again next year, it's a good idea to isolate it from other varieties by 25 feet. Odds are in your favor that the fruit will remain true to the parent, but a possibility exists you've saved the one seed visited by a bee carrying pollen from a different variety.

How Hybrids Form from Cross-Pollination

A hybrid plant has a combination of characteristics from different parent plants in the same species. These plants are created through cross-pollination by insects, environmental factors, and by humans. Plant experts also use other methods to develop hybrids and the quest to grow a marketable cultivar with desirable characteristics is competitive. It takes effort and many years of trial and error to achieve market-worthy status. Meyer lemons, Better Boy tomatoes, tangelos, and jostaberries are examples of commercially viable hybrids.

Garden edibles grown from packaged hybrid seed often have better disease resistance. But saved seed can be sterile and when viable, is more likely to grow less vigorously that the parent plant. Resulting fruit is variable with smaller blossoms and yield. Check your seed package for the symbol F1, the word 'hybrid', or its abbreviation 'hyb.' Plant purchased seed, instead of saving your own, to guarantee dependable results.

All About Seed Types and How to Choose the Best Ones to Grow

All About Cross-Pollination: Why it Matters in Your Garden (2024)

FAQs

All About Cross-Pollination: Why it Matters in Your Garden? ›

Many fruit trees and shrubs that produce berries require two plants of the same type or a second plant of a different species to form fruit, since many fruit plants are unable to self-pollinate

self-pollinate
Self-pollination is a form of pollination in which pollen from one plant arrives at the stigma of a flower (in flowering plants) or at the ovule (in gymnosperms) of the same plant. The term cross-pollination is used for the opposite case, where pollen from one plant moves to a different plant.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Self-pollination
. Two plants increase the chance for fruit with more flowers maturing at different times.

Why is cross-pollination important for plants? ›

In nature, cross-pollination occurs when pollen from one plant is transferred to another plant, resulting in healthier offspring and new plant varieties. It's essential for genetic variation, increasing plants' diversity and adaptability in changing environments.

What vegetables need cross-pollination? ›

Vegetable Cross-Pollination Guide
Vegetable CropWill Cross-Pollinate With
RadishWild radish; spring/summer, winter, and seedpod varieties will all cross-pollinate; daikon, wild mustard, wild turnip
Spinach(more info coming)
SquashCucurbita maxima, C. mixta, C. pepo, and C. moschata will all cross-pollinate
22 more rows

What happens if you cross-pollinate squash and zucchini? ›

Further, if cross-pollination happens you would see the result of the crossing not on the fruit this year but would see it in the seed produced inside the fruit. The seed would contain the genes of both parents. That seed if planted and grown would produce fruit with characteristics of both parents.

How close do plants have to be to cross-pollinate? ›

Plant at least two compatible-pollen varieties within 100 feet of one another. Pollination will still occur if trees are planted closer together, and may even occur between trees planted farther apart than this, but, for ideal pollination, up to 100 foot distance between trees is good to aim for.

What are the disadvantages of cross-pollination? ›

Disadvantages of cross-pollination:
  • Pollen grains are being wasted in more significant quantities.
  • Because of the distance barrier, pollination may fail.
  • Cross-pollination has the potential to introduce undesirable traits.
  • It is uneconomical for plants to create huge, scented, nectar-filled flowers to attract insects.

What are the four advantages of cross-pollination? ›

The offspring are healthier. The seeds are produced in larger number and are more viable. The seeds develop and germinate properly and grow into better plants. Results in new varieties because cross-pollination can be carried out between two different varieties of the same species or even two species.

Will cucumbers and zucchini cross-pollinate? ›

A common misconception is that squash, melons, and cucumbers will cross-pollinate. This is not true; the female flowers of each can be fertilized only by pollen from that same species. Varieties within each species, however, will cross-pollinate.

What should you not plant next to zucchini? ›

Potatoes can also spread diseases such as late blight, which can also affect zucchinis. Cucumbers and pumpkins should not be planted next to zucchinis as they belong to the same family (Cucurbitaceae) and therefore attract similar pests and diseases.

Do cucumbers cross-pollinate? ›

Cucumbers, watermelon, and Loofah gourds only cross only with themselves, so you don't have to worry about isolating them unless you are growing several varieties of the same type.

What plants dont need cross-pollination? ›

Which Plants Are Self-Pollinating? Many, but not all, crops are self-pollinating. This includes: beans), broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, corn, kohlrabi, onions, and peppers. Fruit trees also self-pollinate including apples, cherries, peaches, and pears.

How far apart should I plant tomatoes to prevent cross-pollination? ›

Modern tomato varieties (style length equal or less than anther length in most cases) should be separated by a distance of approximately 10 feet to give a high degree of purity. Older varieties may require a 20 to 25 foot isolation distance.

How to avoid cross-pollination? ›

Isolation Methods for Seed Saving

Keeping plants of the same species separated prevents cross-pollination and thus keeps seeds collected from open-pollinated varieties true-to-type.

What is the purpose of cross pollinating two plants? ›

In higher plants, cross-fertilization is achieved via cross-pollination, when pollen grains (which give rise to sperm) are transferred from the cones or flowers of one plant to egg-bearing cones or flowers of another.

Why is cross-pollination considered more beneficial than self-pollination? ›

Cross-pollination is preferred because it brings about variation in species. Self-pollination does not bring about any variations. Variation brings new traits to the plant which may be advantageous to the plant. For example, it helps the new plant to defend against diseases.

Why is pollination so important for plants? ›

During a flower visit, a pollinator may accidentally brush against the flower's reproductive parts, unknowingly depositing pollen from flower to flower. The plant uses the pollen to produce a fruit or seed. Many plants cannot reproduce without pollen carried to them by foraging pollinators.

Do you need cross-pollination? ›

Many types of trees and shrubs are considered self-pollinating, or self-fruitful, which means they can be pollinated with their own pollen. Other types of trees, especially the edible fruit bearing ones, require cross-pollination.

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