If you manage stone fruit, you already know the dance: bloom hits, bees hustle, and you hope for set. Lately, more growers (and frankly, more consultants I talk to) are supplementing with plum tree pollen to stabilize fruit set when varieties are self-incompatible or bloom windows don’t quite sync. To be honest, it’s not just a trend—cross-pollination can be the difference between a decent harvest and a very good one.
| Origin | Caozhuang Development Zone, Fanzhuang Town, Zhao County, Shijiazhuang, Hebei Province |
| Intended use | Artificial cross-pollination of plum varieties; orchard and breeding applications |
| Germination (lab) | ≈ 75–85% on BK medium at 24 h (real-world use may vary with weather/application) |
| Purity | ≈ ≥95% cleaned pollen fraction |
| Moisture | ≈ 6–8% at pack-out |
| Particle size | Sieved to fine fraction for electrostatic/blower application |
| Packaging | 10 g / 50 g / 100 g sterile vials with desiccant |
| Storage & service life | -18 to -20°C; up to 6–12 months viability when unopened |
| Docs & certifications | COA, phytosanitary certificate; ISO 9001 QMS support on request |
Most plum cultivars are self-incompatible. Even self-fertile types often set better with compatible pollen. Many growers tell me that adding plum tree pollen evens out year-to-year variability—especially when bee activity is clipped by cold, wind, or overlapping bloom is patchy.
Example COA snapshot (one recent lot): germination 82% ±3; moisture 6.5%; foreign matter <5%; plate count within food-safe environmental limits (not for human use, obviously). Methods align with published BK-media protocols and common extension guidance for fruit pollination.
Industries using plum tree pollen: commercial orchards, nurseries, breeding programs, and ag-tech pollination services.
Side-by-side in Hebei (two similar orchards; same rootstock, comparable bloom timing): Orchard A relied on natural transfer; Orchard B used artificial cross-pollination with compatible cultivars. Results were clear: fruit set in B was higher (reported ≈ 30–35% vs ≈ 18–22%), and graded pack-out improved. Weather was decent, which actually makes the gap more convincing. Your mileage may vary, but the direction is consistent with extension literature.
| Vendor | Lab germination | Traceability | Custom blends | Lead time |
| JML (Hebei) | ≈ 75–85% | Lot-level COA, origin stated | Yes, cultivar-specific mixes | 3–7 days in season |
| AgriBloom (global) | ≈ 70–80% | Batch data on request | Limited | 1–2 weeks |
| OrchardSci | ≈ 65–78% | Basic | No | Varies by region |
Customer feedback has been surprisingly consistent: “more uniform set” and “less blank spurs.” Not every block responds the same, but when bloom overlap is shaky, plum tree pollen is cheap insurance.