Part of the fun of growing tropicals comes from the fact that, if conditions are right, they keep blooming and fruiting thruout the winter. One of my veldt fig bonsai (
Ficus burtt-davyi) has just produced a couple of new figs! (A picture of the same tree sits above the list of blog followers, to the right of these posts.)
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| The fig on the right is as large as a large pea, and is full-sized. |
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| The pink lines represent individual flowers. |
For any who don't know, the fruit of a
Ficus is an unusual structure called a
syconium. A syconium is what is called an "inverted inflorescence:" what we think of as the flesh of the fruit forms a closed receptacle with the flowers
inside, surrounding a central cavity and facing inward. (See diagram.) Pollination, in almost all
Ficus species, depends on a tiny wasp, the female of which bores her way into the inner hollow to lay her eggs. As she carries out her maternal duties, she gets pollen on herself. When she leaves the syconium, she carries that pollen with her to other trees of the same species. The tree pays for her pollination services with food for her larvae, and a sheltered place for them to grow to maturity.
(The common fig,
Ficus carica, is one of the few that don't require pollination by a wasp. So there's no need to