Any plant can pollinate with any plant. Just so long as there's bees there. Bees accidentally get pollen from other plants on there feet and can ACCIDENTALLY cross-pollinate. So, yes, a pear CAN pollinate with a plum tree.
it could
No, a plum tree cannot pollinate an apple tree. They are different species and require pollen from the same species or a closely related one for successful pollination.
no
Pine tree, pear tree, peach tree, pawpaw tree, poplar tree, plum tree.
a pleachThe combination of a peach and a plum is 'pleach'Nectarines often believed to be a crossbreed between peaches and plums, or a "peach with a plum skin", but they are not they belong to the same species as peaches.
Ubileen can successfully cross pollinate with Orcas, Seckel, Highland, Comice, Bosc and Asian Pears.
Victoria plums are self fertile so do not require another plum tree to pollinate them.
Yes, plums need the correct pollinator. The right one depends on which variety you have.
According to my planting guide it says the tree is self pollinating. My tree has produced fruit for more than 7 years but if I can't find out how to prevent the squirrels from eating the immature fruit it will come down. My latest device is a motion activated sprinkler and this seems to be working. The tree is loaded. (Note there are no fruit trees near this tree to pollinate it).
No, pear trees and apple trees cannot cross-pollinate successfully because they belong to different genera (Malus and Pyrus). To ensure proper pollination for fruit production, it is best to plant two apple trees or two pear trees of compatible varieties in close proximity.
# date (date palm) # palm # pine # pear # plum
Parker or Patten will pollinate a Summer Crisp.