Synchronous flowering

Flowering synchrony is the amount of overlap between flowering periods of plants in their mating season compared to what would be expected to occur randomly under given environmental conditions.[1] A population which is flowering synchronously has more plants flowering (producing pollen or receiving pollen) at the same time than would be expected to occur randomly. A population which is flowering asynchronously has fewer plants flowering at the same time than would be expected randomly. Flowering synchrony can describe synchrony of flowering periods within a year, across years, and across species in a community. There are fitness benefits and disadvantages to synchronized flowering, and it is a widespread phenomenon across pollination syndromes.

  1. ^ Ims, Rolf (1990). "The ecology and evolution of reproductive synchrony". Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 5 (5): 135–140. doi:10.1016/0169-5347(90)90218-3. PMID 21232341.