1.12 FLOWERING AND POLLINATION
In general, the first flowering, or “rehearsal”
The physiological cue to flower is promoted by climatic or mechanical stress. The principal stress in Mexico that induces flowering are the low temperatures of Autumn and Winter, when cool air masses known as
1.12.1 Percent of flowering plants
The percentage of plants that flower varies each year. The first flowering usually involves a low percentage (27.19%) of plants, but by the third year of flowering (fourth or fifth year after planting) this amount reaches 97.07%. After the third flowering, the percentage of plants that flower may increase or decrease. Heavy flowering in one year is generally followed by reduced flowering the following year, due principally to the low number of developed flowering shoots. There are also numerous other mitigating factors, such as the amount of light filtering through to the vanilla plants, the health of the plants, etc.
1.12.2 Natural pollination
Mexico is one of few countries where it is possible to obtain vanilla beans through natural pollination, although it happens rarely, accounting for only about 1% of all fruits. The identity of the natural pollinator(s) of vanilla is unclear, and for a long time it has been said that bees (
Other orchid bees, namely, individuals of
Fig. 1.3 An
1.12.3 Hand pollination
Inside the labellum of the vanilla flower, the part which attaches to and wraps around the column, is a tissue that flaps down from the column, called the rostellum. The rostellum hangs exactly in between the stigma (female organ) and the anther sac (male organ), and is considered to be a product of evolution selected to prevent self-fertilization. In hand pollination, pollen is manually moved from the anther sac to the stigma, bypassing the rostellum.
Hand pollination is performed with a small, thin stick roughly the size and shape of a toothpick, but can be made from bamboo, bone, spines, or other materials (Figure 1.4). The method of hand pollination consists of:
Fig. 1.4 Hand pollination of a vanilla flower.
I Use a toothpick or similar tool to make a longitudinal slit in the labellum on the side opposite of the column to reveal the reproductive structures.
II With the same end of the toothpick, lift underneath the rostellum and flip vertically so that the anther sac can hang down unimpeded over the stigma lobes.
III Gently press the anther to the stigma until the two stick together and then remove the toothpick.
Hand pollination is performed from 7 am to noon, or a little bit later when it is overcast, but never when the flowers have already closed or withered. Hand pollination should be conducted by able and experienced people. Women are more commonly involved in the task. An experienced person pollinates 1,000 to 1,500 flowers per 5 to 7 hour period (ca. 4 flowers/minute), assuming that the plants are in the same area. The first flowers in the raceme that are pollinated yield longer and straighter fruits, while the last flowers to open characteristically produce smaller and curved fruits that have less value.