Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
The small, unspecialized flowers of Jaltomata antillana (Solanaceae), typical of island species, are likely allochthonous in origin given similar congeneric close relatives in the Andes. Floral nectar, produced continuously during the life of the flower, is yellowish in color and is UV absorptive, in contrast with the white UV reflecting corolla. The day the flower opens flowers are pistillate (anthers not yet presenting pollen) for only a few hours and then become functionally hermaphroditic (anthers dehisce). Within each flower there is length variation among the stamens, size variation among anthers, and staggered anther dehiscence, collectively an apparent pollen-dispensing mechanism. Flowers close each night both when the flower will be functional the next day and at floral senescence. In a pollinator-free greenhouse, 100% of the flowers that were manually self-pollinated set fruits; however, 29% of the tagged unmanipulated flowers set fruit. Autonomous self-pollination takes place at the end of the corolla's life and allows fruit and seed production in the absence of pollinators but results in fruits that are lighter and contain fewer seeds than fruits resulting from manual self-pollinations.
Mione et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: