Page:Darwin - The various contrivances by which orchids are fertilized by insects (1877).djvu/82

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62
OPHREÆ
Chap. II.

finding three dead insects, permanently glued to the discs. Whilst sucking the nectar, which takes two or three minutes, the projecting joint of the femur stands under the large helmet-like viscid disc on either side; and when the insect retreats, the disc exactly fits on and is glued to the prominent joint, or to the surface of the femur. The movement of depression in the caudicle now takes place, and the mass of pollen-grains then projects just beyond the tibia; so that the insect, when entering another flower, can hardly fail to fertilise the stigma, which is situated directly beneath the disc on either side.


Fig. 9.

Peristylus viridis, or Frog Orchis.

Front view of flower.

a. anther. n′ n′. lateral nectarics.
s. stigma. l. labellum
n. orifice of central nectary.


Peristylus viridis.—This plant, which bears the odd name of the Frog Orchis, has been placed by many botanists in the genus Habenaria or Platanthera; but as the discs are not naked, it is doubtful whether this