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if no bees pollante your tomatoes will tomatoes not grow need to know exactly how bee pollanation plays key role in growing a vegtable garden....Thank you..saphire047@yahoo.com

2007-07-09 09:00:20 · 10 answers · asked by Shelley P 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

10 answers

Tomato plants produce perfect flowers, that is that they have both male & female parts. Tomato plants do not need bees or any other insect to pollenate their flowers (carry the pollen from the stamen to the pistil). Pollenation is primairly done via wind and vibration. The pollen produced in the male stamen is dislodged by wind and vibration and drops on to the female pistil resulting in fertilization.

Here is Washington State University's explanation: "Tomato flowers come complete with both male and female organs and are self-fertilizing. Pollen is shed with great abundance between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. on dry, sunny days. Normally, the wind will pollinate the flower sufficiently. To ensure better pollination, gently shake or vibrate the entire tomato plant. The best time to do this is midday when it's warm, and the humidity is low. Optimum fruit set occurs within a very narrow night temperature range of between 60° F and 70° F. When tomato plants experience night temperatures lower than 55° F or above 75° F, interference with the growth of pollen tubes prevents normal fertilization. The pollen may even become sterile, thus causing the blossoms to drop. High daytime temperatures, rain, or prolonged humid conditions also hamper good fruit set. If the humidity is too low, the pollen will be too dry and will not adhere to the stigma. If the humidity is too high, the pollen will not shed readily. Pollen grains may then stick together, resulting in poor or nonexistent pollination.
Have you ever wondered why large-fruited tomato cultivars are sometimes "catfaced" but not the small-fruited ones? This is due to a failure of complete fertilization of the ovule. The larger fruit demands more complete fertilization. This is not a disease but a physiological disorder.

For further infomation contact your local WSU Extension Office.

From The Gardener, Vol. 6 No. 2, Summer 1995

Holly Kennell, WSU Extension agent, King County"

2007-07-09 15:43:47 · answer #1 · answered by A Well Lit Garden 7 · 0 0

There is not such thing as "bee pollen". Bees pollinate, but they don't produce their own pollen if that is what you are meaning. However, if you are asking if only bees can pollinate tomatoes then the answer is no. Tomatoes can be pollinated by a variety of insects and not just bees. You can even pollinate them yourself with a q-tip by gently swirling the q-tip inside each flower. Pollination is just the transfer of pollen from male to female parts.

2007-07-09 09:25:37 · answer #2 · answered by Sptfyr 7 · 2 1

An easy way to pollinate is simply use a paintbrush or feather duster. Simply lightly touch the flowers and then move to another. Wont take that long on a few plants.
Buy tomato plants at Dunscar Garden Centre.
http://www.dunscar.com/

2007-07-09 09:19:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

OMG Mrs Clause is a swinger? Seriously, the best return I can come up with when I'm assssked to inspect the goods and report is; "Honey, you know I love that you have such excellent protein retention" ....and change the subject quick. Late edit. Once, when I was seeing off some friends on a sea-voyage, I was suddenly fascinated by another landlubber waving at the ship. I totally couldn't help myself. I got down on my knees behind it and took a picture of ..... (well, actually, when I got down there I realised I had miscalculated badly and had to crawl backwards ten paces then to fit it in) .......a butt SO BIG it STILL looked big beside the ocean liner. This may sound rude at first, but the memory of that butt has enabled me to give a genuine, honest well rounded, delightfully received answer to the above question in EVERY circumstance. I can endure the looong hard searching 'stare of honesty' from a 110kg bottle blond outside any Dept store dressing room in a tied blouse and pair of low-rider pink spandex sprayed-on pants with ease. (I still get nightmares about that biological 'salvage-tug' tail but.) .

2016-05-21 21:44:58 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

YES YOU DEFINATELY CAN....when a tomato plant starts blooming, you simply go outside and gently shake the whole tomato plant for about 5 seconds..this will pollinate them I do mine all the time check out my veggie garden on page 11 of the link below...is my flickr photos..the large view you see of the garden tomatoes are the one in the back ..standing 6 foot high..and fruit out well..

2007-07-09 10:38:01 · answer #5 · answered by pcbeachrat 7 · 0 0

Honey Bees are perfect pollenators. On a given day, they only pollenate one thing, be it tomatoes, honeysuckle, beans or whatever. They are the best, but other insects can pollenate your tomatoes. I've more often than not found small bumble bees to be the ones on my tomato blossoms. Any insect can pick up pollen on their feet and move it from one place to another. So you wouldn't actually NEED honey bees, but they would be preferred. If you have no insects pollenating, your plants will bear little to no fruit.

2007-07-09 09:07:38 · answer #6 · answered by TN Seeker 5 · 1 1

No, there are many ways a plant can pollinate. You can pollinate the plant yourself, the wind will do it, other bugs, etc. Bees aren't specifically needed to pollinate vegetation.

2007-07-09 09:05:06 · answer #7 · answered by Lilith 4 · 0 0

Essentially, yes. In fact, if you grow different varieties of heirloom tomatoes nearby, you are best off not saving those seeds to replant next year, only because the bees may have mixed the genetic material of the fruit you get.

Hybrids are mostly sterile...

2007-07-09 09:40:19 · answer #8 · answered by TURANDOT 6 · 0 2

you do not need bees you can play bee get an artist paint brush and move pollen from one flower to another

2007-07-09 11:50:57 · answer #9 · answered by Marcia 3 · 1 0

I believe bee pollination is necessary to pollinate any plant unless you do it manually. With a q-tip, etc

2007-07-09 09:04:20 · answer #10 · answered by debsblmn 2 · 0 1

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