Column (botany)
The
column, or technically the
gynostemium, is a reproductive structure in the center of an
orchid flower (also in the Family
Aristolochiaceae). It is derived from the fusion of both male and female parts (stamens and
pistil) into a single organ that both releases
pollen and also receives it (from another individual) for fertilization. Unlike almost all other
flowering plants, the single male anther at the tip of the
column produces pollen that is not free and powdery but held in waxy masses of two, four or six pellets called
pollinia. The transfer of
pollinia from one flower to another, though highly efficient, is often reliant upon one particular species of
insect and it can be catastrophic for the population if its pollinator disappears from the community.