By Professor Philip Garnock-Jones of
Photo: Flickr user Jocelyn Kinghorn / CC BY-SA 2.0
Traditionally, the plants associated with Christmas in the Northern Hemisphere - holly, ivy, mistletoe - are celebrated for their evergreen leaves in winter or their fruits.
But in the Southern Hemisphere, Christmas falls in peak flowering season, a time of rebirth and reproduction more akin to the northern Easter.
For plants, finding and attracting mates is a challenge. They can't sense their mates in order to choose, nor can they move to contact a partner.
Seed plants use pollen to safely carry sperm to eggs. Some transfer their pollen on the wind, but about 90 percent of flowering plants enlist the involuntary help of animals to find their mates and to carry their pollen from anthers (the pollen-producing part of a flower's stamen) to stigmas (the receptive tip of a flower's female reproductive organ).
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