A
pollenizer (
polleniser) is a
plant that provides
pollen.
The words pollenizer and
pollinator are often confused: A pollinator is the
biotic agent that moves the pollen, such as
bees,
moths,
bats, and
birds.
The verb form
to pollenize, is to be the
source of pollen, or to be the sire of the next plant generation.
While some plants are capable of self pollenization, the term is more often used in
pollination management as a plant that provides abundant, compatible, and viable pollen at the same
flowering time as the pollenized plant. For example most
crabapple varieties are good pollenizers for any
apple variety that blooms at the same time, and are often used in apple orchards for the purpose. Some apple
cultivars produce very little pollen; some produce pollen that's sterile, or incompatible with other apple varieties. These are poor pollenizers.
A pollenizer can also be the male plant in
dioecious species (where entire plants are of a single sex), such as with
kiwifruit or
holly.
Plants are sometimes mistakenly called pollinators. For example, some
nursery catalogs may say variety X should be planted as a pollinator for variety Y, when they actually should be referring to it as a pollenizer. Strictly, a plant can only be a pollinator when it's self fertile and it physically pollinates itself without the aid of an external pollinator, as in the case of
apomictic species like some
rowans and
hawthorns.
Note: pollenizer is the most common spelling in
US English, with polleniser in
UK English and
Australian English; occasionally one sees the alternative spellings pollinizer or polliniser.
See also:
Pollination
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