All About Japan

The Birds & the Bees of Sakura Trees

Cherry Blossoms
The Birds & the Bees of Sakura Trees

As the cherry tree buds unravel upon first bloom, honeybees visit the delicate flowers for sweet nectar and provide pollination services. The impressive floral spectacle is short-lived, as the petals perform their descending dance to the ground after only a week or so. While some cherry trees soon bear fruit, the ornamental sterile hybrids do not.

1. Sweet vs. Sour Cherry Trees

1. Sweet vs. Sour Cherry Trees

Most sweet cherry trees require cross-pollination—pollen from a different cultivar of cherry tree. But sour cherry trees can self-pollinate, and are able to pollinate even if only pollen from cherry trees of the same cultivar or same trees are available—though pollen from different cultivars would boost yield. However, Japan's popular Somei Yoshino trees are sterile hybrids, and don't produce fruit. Since they don't produce seeds, they're grown by grafting in Japan.

2. Busy Bees Act as Pollinators

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5BxEU3TE00Q

The most important pollinator for cherry trees is by far the honeybee. Honeybees are incentivized to visit the blooming flowers as they contain nectar, which is an important source of carbohydrates for the honeybees. Pollen sticks to the bees' bodies when they inject their tongues into the flowers' nectar. As they move from flower to flower with all the pollen, they effectively pollinate flowers as they come into contact with ripe stigmas.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26oq5tWrb2Q

The above video shows the typical pollination process—just in case we've forgotten our high school biology classes!

3. What Role Do Birds Play?

3. What Role Do Birds Play?

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/Tree_Sparrow_August_2007_Osaka_Japan.jpg

As for birds? All they have to do is pick the berries and eat them! Even the sour cherries can be an important source of food for small birds and mammals. Although the berries don't have much flesh, they're juicy and provide nutrients. Unfortunately for us, the sour cherries are a bit too sour, and our taste buds don't fancy them too much!

Interestingly, sparrows have adopted the role of nectar pirate since about half a century ago, and loot nectar without providing pollination services by cutting the flowers near the nectary. While it may not matter much if they're targeting Somei Yoshino trees since they're sterile, it must suck for the other cherry trees!