Assuming 100% of the pollen gets delivered to exactly the locations it needs to pollinate a female flower, how much pollen is needed to pollinate a flower? If it's more than one unit of pollen, what, if anything, prevents more than one plant's pollen from pollinating the flower?
If we need an example plant to answer this question, let's assume zucchini. For instance, if you plant a zucchini in the middle of a spaghetti squash and an orange-fleshed squash, is there any likelihood at all that you'll get a single zucchini pollinated by both in one generation (such that the next generation of cross-pollinated zucchini would be both stringy and orange-fleshed instead of just one or the other)?