1. Sonication is a seemingly effective method for foraging insects to
extract pollen rapidly from poricidal anthers. However, without a disp
ensing mechanism to limit the pollen extraction a single forager might
be able to glean all of the pollen from a flower in a single visit. 2
. The vibratory release mechanism of a buzz-pollinated flower species,
Solanum laciniatum, and its relationship with time was investigated.
3. The sonication vibration magnitude required to eject pollen from th
e anthers increased with frequency; vibrations at frequencies below 18
0 Hz were particularly effective owing to the low (124 Hz) natural fre
quency of the stamens and the good transmission of low-frequency vibra
tion by the anthers. The natural frequency of stamens was low compared
with the sonication frequencies of bumble-bees and did not change sig
nificantly when sonicated, 4. Large amounts of pollen (72 000 grains)
were released in initial sonications, but this was a small percentage
(18%) of the total available pollen; pollen release continued in meter
ed quantities over time, 5. The stamen vibration mode created centrifu
gal forces, which forced pollen out of the apical pores, and the gradu
al dehydration of the tapetal fluid remaining in lower regions of dehi
scent poricidal anthers produced a timed release mechanism, 6. The fre
quency increase from the flight wing-beat frequency to the sonication
buzz enables bumble-bees to generate high accelerations, which are abl
e to release pollen from the anthers, using thoracic vibrations, which
are limited by the maximum possible displacement of the indirect flig
ht muscles.