Tree pollen exploits surrogate mothers

A rare kind of desert tree can manage a bit of sexual wizardry that scientists have never seen before in a plant, reports an international research team.

Rare cypress of Algeria’s Tassili N’Ajjer desert is a reproductive oddball. F. Abdoun/IMEP-CNRS

An Algerian cypress releases pollen that can develop without fertilization, using another tree species’ female organs instead of a mate’s, says Christian Pichot of the French National Institute for Agronomy Research in Avignon, France.