Because plants are rooted in the ground, they use one of two
major strategies to get their pollen from one plant to another to produce the
next generation.
One is through the means of animals– think bees,
hummingbirds, butterflies, and even bats.
In exchange for nectar or pollen, the animal visits one plant and then
another, physically transferring the pollen.
Bumblebee with pollen sacs, photo Tony Wills, Wikipedia
|
Some plants, however, skip the middleman, and literally
throw caution to the wind. They release
their pollen, “hoping” that some will land on another plant of the same
species. Because these wind-pollinated
plants depend on something that is as unpredictable as wind, they are forced to
release clouds and clouds of pollen, rather than the much smaller amounts
produced by insect-pollinated plants.
That is why everything is now coated with a green-yellow
film. The pollen grains get into noses
and throats and eyes, and can be very irritating. And, interestingly, I just heard from a
friend’s allergist that people are rarely actually allergic to pine pollen
– the pollen grains are too big to really cause much of a reaction. However, there are lots of other plants
flowering right now that can cause an allergic reaction, and that combined with
the irritant of the pine pollen is enough to make for some true suffering for
the unfortunate. Luckily, the season
doesn’t last too long, and we can all hope for a nice rain to drop it out of
the air.
Pine Pollen Storm, Irene Shonle |
Even though pine pollen may not
be the major cause for sneezing and hayfever, other wind pollinated plants more
than make up for it. Ragweed is the
major culprit, other wind-pollinated problem children are sagebrush, redroot pigweed, lamb’s quarters,
Russian thistle (tumbleweed), and English plantain. Some species of grasses and
other wind-pollinated trees also produce highly allergenic pollen ( I
personally am allergic to smooth brome).