How to Hand Pollinate Zucchini When It Won’t Fruit
Are your zucchini plants producing flowers but no vegetables? They might need help pollinating. It takes just a few minutes to hand-pollinate squash plants and it is easy to do.
Julie Martens Forney
In this feature, garden authority Gayla Trail, the creator of YouGrowGirl.com, answers frequently asked questions and offers gardening advice.
Question: My Zucchini Flowers But Won't Fruit. Why Isn't My Zucchini Plant Producing?
I get this question a lot. Here's the situation as it's usually described to me: My zucchini have beautiful blossoms but they fall off with no fruit. If fruit do develop, the little things rot away. I end up with only one or two zucchini per plant. This happens every year. I water constantly. Why does this happen?
Answer:
Sounds to me like you are doing everything right. Zucchinis need more water during the fruiting stage, so you’re on the right track unless you are quite literally watering constantly! Based on your description, I’d say the reason your plants aren’t setting fruit is because they are not being pollinated. This can be caused by a lack of pollinators or simply because the pollinators aren’t moving between flowers and transferring the pollen.
Most common garden plants produce flowers that have their male and female parts crammed into one. However, the reproductive processes of squash plants are separated into distinctly male and female flowers. A pollinating insect must transfer the pollen from the male flower to the stigma inside a female flower for fruit to develop.
Image courtesy of Felder Rushing
In this photo of a yellow squash, you can see the female flower with immature fruit (technically the ovary) behind the flower, and the stigma from a male flower being used to pollinate. It's the same for zucchini and any other plant in the squash family, including winter squash and pumpkins.
The fruit then develops from the female flower only. Squash plants tend to produce loads of male flowers early in the season, sometimes well before the first females start to show up. This can account for what appears to be a fruit set problem early on. The male flowers are useless until the females arrive, but they are delicious stuffed with ricotta cheese and fried in batter!
Since you have described what sounds like immature fruit dropping off, I’d say your plants are producing females, but are not being properly pollinated. The solution to your dilemma is to hand pollinate the female flowers with the males.
How to Plant and Grow Zucchini
Get tips for planting, growing and harvesting a bumper crop of this super squash.
It’s simple. Here’s how.
Male and Female Zucchini Flowers
The first thing you’ll need to do is identify the male and female flowers. Males have a straight, thin stem just behind the petals. They contain the anther inside, which should be loaded up with powdery, yellow pollen. Females are easily identified by a tiny, immature zucchini fruit (or ovary) that sits just behind the petals. Depending on the variety, it sometimes looks more like a thickened stem than a fruit.
How to Hand Pollinate
Zucchini flowers tend to open up wide in the morning and are often closed by the afternoon, so it is important to hand pollinate in the morning. Pluck a fully open male flower from the plant. Peel off the petals to expose the pollen-heavy anther. Gently brush the pollen over the stigma of a fully opened female flower. That’s it!
Over the next few days you should see the small zucchini begin to swell and grow into a fruit. Harvest when it is about 3-6 inches.
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