Hi Rick,
These are all good questions; I wish I had definitive answers! It's possible the original population of d'alessandroi was located at a higher elevation than besseae near Chiguinda, Ecuador and the swarm migrated downhill, inter-breeding with besseae to create the natural hybrid Jersey. I believe the original population of d'alessandroi was very small, and I'd be surprised if any of that population remains. I think very little that's being sold nowadays marked "d'alessandroi" is the true species. As far as a pollinator, I've heard stories that both species were hummingbird pollinated, but I doubt this because there doesn't seem to be any "reward" involved. They are probably pollinated by an insect; possibly a beatle attracted by a fragrance we can't detect. I don't think a pollination has ever been recorded. Also, I don't think there is much temperature differential between these habitats because of their close proximity; possibly less than 2-3 F; certainly not enough to cause me to grow them differently.
These are all good questions; I wish I had definitive answers! It's possible the original population of d'alessandroi was located at a higher elevation than besseae near Chiguinda, Ecuador and the swarm migrated downhill, inter-breeding with besseae to create the natural hybrid Jersey. I believe the original population of d'alessandroi was very small, and I'd be surprised if any of that population remains. I think very little that's being sold nowadays marked "d'alessandroi" is the true species. As far as a pollinator, I've heard stories that both species were hummingbird pollinated, but I doubt this because there doesn't seem to be any "reward" involved. They are probably pollinated by an insect; possibly a beatle attracted by a fragrance we can't detect. I don't think a pollination has ever been recorded. Also, I don't think there is much temperature differential between these habitats because of their close proximity; possibly less than 2-3 F; certainly not enough to cause me to grow them differently.