The flowers produce pollen on anthers near the end of the corolla tube, and nectar at the bottom of the corolla. Only butterflies, moths, skippers, and very long-tongued bees (the largest
bumblebees) have long enough tongues to reach the nectar. Shorter-tongued bees and
flower flies visit to feed on or gather pollen. It is a larval host to the
phlox moth (
Schinia indiana). The flowers are
self-incompatible. Unless they are
cross-pollinated, they will not produce any seed. Butterflies,
skippers, and moths are the most effective pollinators. As they insert their
proboscis into the corolla tube, it touches the
anthers and picks up pollen. When they roll up their proboscis and move to the next flower, some pollen remains and is transferred to the
stigma as they insert their proboscis into the next flower. ==References==