Pollination, self-incompatibility, and fruit production in corokia cotoneaster (escalloniaceae)

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Abstract

Corokia cotoneaster (Escalloniaceae) is an evergreen, divaricating shrub endemic to New Zealand. Although it has small, simple, open flowers and is neither dichogamous nor markedly herko-gamous, the pollination system exhibits some specialised features. C. cotoneaster is visited by a wide range of insects, but a single species of native bee appears to be the effective pollinator. In addition, C. cotoneaster is self-incompatible, an unusual condition in the New Zealand flora. It is suggested that the divaricating habit may impose particular constraints on the reproductive biology of this and other species. © 1994 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Webb, C. J. (1994). Pollination, self-incompatibility, and fruit production in corokia cotoneaster (escalloniaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany, 32(3), 385–392. https://doi.org/10.1080/0028825X.1994.10410481

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