This year has been a weird one for UK gardeners \u2013 unpredictable spring temperatures meant flowers failed to bloom and throughout the rainy summer, slugs have been savaging salad crops. But why and when plants blossom is about more than just early cold spells and wet weather, and a listener in California has asked Crowdscience to investigate.
Flowering is vital to both plants and us. Without it, they wouldn\u2019t be able to evolve and survive (and we wouldn\u2019t have anything to eat). Anand Jagatia hears that different species have developed different strategies for doing this based on all sorts of things, from where they\u2019re located to how big they are to what kind of insects are around to pollinate them. The famously stinky Titan Arum, or corpse flower, for example, blooms for a single day once every decade or so before collapsing on itself and becoming dormant again.
This gives it the best chance of attracting carrion beetles in the steamy Sumatran jungle. But other plants open their petals much more regularly, which is a process regulated by a clever internal clock that can sense daylight and night. It\u2019s even possible to trick some of them into producing flowers out of season. Cold is also a vital step for some brassicas and trees, and scientists are starting to understand the genes involved. But as climate change makes winters in parts of the world warmer and shorter, there are worrying knock on effects for our food supply.
Produced by Marijke Peters for BBC World Service.
Featuring:
Guy Barter, RHS \nProfessor Judy Jernstedt, UC Davis\nProfessor Dame Caroline Dean, John Innes Centre\nProfessor Ove Nilsson, Umea Plant Science Centre
(Photo credit: Getty Images)