Herkogamy
Herkogamy is a common strategy employed by hermaphroditic angiosperms to reduce sexual interference between male (anthers) and female (stigma) function. Herkogamy differs from other such strategies (e.g. dichogamy) by supplying a spatial separation of the anthers and stigma.
Two forms of herkogamy are most common:
1. Approach Herkogamy- (pin) is the presentation of the stigma above the level of the anthers. This arrangement of sex organs causes floral visitors to first contact the stigma, before removing pollen from the anthers. This form of herkogamy is considered to be common, and is associated with a large, diverse fauna of floral visitors/pollinators.
2. Reverse Herkogamy- (thrum) is displayed when the stigma is recessed below the level of the anthers. This arrangement causes floral visitors to first contact the anthers before the stigma. For this reason, reverse herkogamy is believed to facilitate greater pollen export than approach herkogamy. This type of sex-organ arrangement is typically associated with Lepidopteran (moths and butterflies) pollination.
References
- Peter K. Endress (1996). Diversity and evolutionary biology of tropical flowers Cambridge tropical biology series. Cambridge University Press. pp. 194–195. ISBN 9780521565103. Retrieved 25 February 2012.