How Are Grasses Pollinated?
- All grasses are wind pollinated, according to Ohio State University. Grasses are angiosperms, or flowering plants. They do not have all the flowering structures or the flowering structures grasses do have are smaller than flowering plants that draw insect pollinators. Those flowers usually have large, colorful petals and lovely scents.
Most wind-pollinated plants are green, have no or very small petals and lack scent. The flower structures they have are adapted for catching wind and pollen. Relative to other flowers, grass flowers may have larger anthers, the male flower structures that produce and hold pollen until a pollinator rubs it off. They also often have long, feathery stigmas, which are female reproductive structures that capture pollen. In insect-pollinated flowers, the stigmas capture pollen by their stickiness. - Cornsilk is the plant's style and stigma combined, connected to an ovary.Hemera Technologies/AbleStock.com/Getty Images
The individual reproductive parts of grasses are arranged in units called "spikelets." Each is the equivalent to a single flower. Grasses often have many individual spikelets packed near each other and, together, they are usually referred to by names such as grass "plume" or "wheat sheath." Spikelets are located near the top of plants, so pollen moves freely from one plant to another. - Rather than using energy to produce large petals or scent, grasses use their energy to produce large amounts of pollen. That increases the odds of at least some pollen finding its way to another flower's stigma. Plants that rely on wind for pollination, such as oaks and grasses, often densely pack the land around them with their offspring.
- The University of Tulsa notes that grasses usually begin pollinating in May. Some native grasses only pollinate in spring, but ornamental and lawn grasses can produce pollen throughout summer and into the fall.