Yes, Vaccinium corymbosum (highbush blueberry) and Vaccinium ashei (rabbiteye blueberry) can cross-pollinate as they are both varieties of blueberries. Cross-pollination can improve fruit set and yield in blueberry plants.
Plants that cross pollinate are called hybrids.
by emasculation and hand pollination
Marigolds can cross-pollinate with other marigold varieties, but generally do not cross-pollinate with other plant species. It is recommended to keep different marigold varieties separated by at least 500 feet to avoid unwanted cross-pollination.
You can cross-pollinate various fruits such as apples, pears, cherries, plums, and peaches. These fruits are often compatible for cross-pollination, leading to successful hybrid varieties with desirable traits.
Mendel allowed the offspring of his experimental plants to self-pollinate. That is, he allowed the male and female reproductive cells of the same plant to join and produce a seed. One of the characteristics of pea plants is that it is easy to cross different pea plants but, left to themselves, they self-pollinate with little chance of any accidental pollination between plants. Source: Harcourt Science 6 2005 edition at page A25.
Plants that cross pollinate are called hybrids.
Synonyms of pollinate can be breed, cross-fertilize, and crossbreed.And fertilize.
Yes, these apples can cross pollinate. This could create a new variety of apple that is a mixture of the two.
yes
No
No.
yes it is
Yes, butternut squash and zucchini can cross-pollinate because they are both members of the same plant species, Cucurbita pepo.
No they are to totally different types of plants, Marigold = Tagetes and African Daisy = Diamorphotheca. In order for them to cross-pollinate they have to be compatible at least at a genus level
Ubileen can successfully cross pollinate with Orcas, Seckel, Highland, Comice, Bosc and Asian Pears.
You get pea plants.
by emasculation and hand pollination