The mechanism of pollination is extremely intricate. The insect,
while trying to fix its legs, slips into the spaces between
the appendages and further into the narrow slots between the
anthers, right inside, toward the so-called corpuscles--structures
that work like traps. The trapped leg is fixed between the
two corpuscles, and flat paired bodies of pollen--pollinia hang on the
claws of the insect. When it moves to another flower, it again slips into the
slots between the anthers and tucks the pollinia right into the hidden
pollen-receptive cameras.