How Does the Pomegranate Tree Form Fruit?
- Two or three flowers can develop on each branch, the strongest developing into a pomegranate fruit.Pomegranate blossom image by furlan1985 from Fotolia.com
Depending on the particular cultivar, two to five flowers develop at the ends of the branches, the most vigorous in each cluster surviving to produce a fruit. The flowers are either cross-pollinated between other suitable cultivars or self-pollinated on the same tree or another of the same cultivar. Both methods of pollination depend on pollinators -- bees and other browsing insects, and some birds if the pomegranate variety produces nectar. - Pollen on the flower's 200 to 350 anthers is transferred to the stigma by the pollinators. The pollen then usually germinates, and each time this occurs on a pomegranate flower, a tube forms and grows down into the ovary where fertilization occurs, resulting in the formation of a seed. The number of arils within the ovary represents the number of times pollination resulting in fertilization occurred during the life of the flower, and the greater the number of arils, the greater the number of fertilization events.
- The sepals of the pomegranate flower remain as part of the outer structure of the fruit.fleur de grenade image by MONIQUE POUZET from Fotolia.com
Flower buds are protected by the thick calyx, or sepals of the flower, an anatomical structure common to all flowers although the pomegranate calyx is not green but red. The tight, protective calyx opens out slightly as the flower emerges and the pollination process begins. As the flowers mature and the petals drop away, the calyx stays as the distinctive pedicle on the end of the swelling ovary developing behind it, still bearing dried anthers and stigma. - A full-grown fruit can be 2 1/2 to 5 inches in diameter.pomegranate,branch image by Greg Pickens from Fotolia.com
Given the right horticultural conditions, the fruit can grow and ripen in just more than three months, resulting in the familiar globe of tough outer skin containing the internal structures that protect and nurture the juicy arils. The skin contains the highest levels of antioxidants, even more than green tea, and although it is not edible, it is used in extracts mainly within the health and skin care industries. - The inner structures of the pomegranate, showing the seeds attached within the ovarian and placental tissueIsolated pomegranate image by Fotoskat from Fotolia.com
The clusters, or locules, of arils develop from a pale, fibrous network of what is essentially placental tissue, arranged in particular patterns depending on the cultivar, and separated by thicker bands of pale ovarian wall tissue that thickens as the seeds grow. The seeds germinate extremely easily in the right climate, and a pomegranate bush or tree will be ready to flower within five years of growth for the cycle to start again as a parent plant.
Pomegranate Flowers
Pollination and Fertilization
Fruit Development
Full-Grown Pomegranate
Internal Structure
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