Reproduction Solidago altissima is
self-incompatible, meaning that the pollen from one plant cannot pollinate the female flower parts of the same plant. External link to gallformers
Chemical S. altissima produce cysteine and serine
protease inhibitors as an
inducible defense against herbivory. These protease inhibitors can negatively affect the digestive system of herbivores slowing growth and reproduction making them an effective mean of resistance. The production of these inhibitors is costly and can vary between populations, possibly being lower in areas that are not subject to as much predation.
Ducking Ducking has been found to occur in populations of
S. altissima as a
defense mechanism. This is a process in which certain individuals within a population will bow until their tops point downward in an effort to hide from egg laying insects. This bowing is temporary, only occurring during the egg laying period of species that use the plant as a host, such as goldenrod gall fly (
Eurosta solidaginis) and the goldenrod bunch gall midge (
Rhopalomyia solidaginis). Insect species inject their eggs into goldenrod buds causing spherical swelling on the plant known as a
gall. Members of the population with this "candy-cane" phenotype experience a lower chance of hosting eggs and having galls formed by these herbivores. Individuals that undergo ducking are in the minority, with most individuals staying upright through growth and flowering. This genetic phenomenon, of two stem growth phenotypes within one species, is a form of
dimorphism. Though ducking provides
S. altissima with the benefit of being able to avoid damage from insect oviposition, the fact that it occurs in a low number of individuals in populations suggests that there is a cost to having this trait, possibly preventing it from becoming the major phenotype. ==Conservation==