The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pollinium \Pol*lin"i*um\, n.; pl. Pollinia. [ NL. See Pollen.] (Bot.) A coherent mass of pollen, as in the milkweed and most orchids.
Wiktionary
n. (context palynology English) A coherent mass of pollen, as in the milkweed and most orchids, which is dispersed as a single unit during pollination.
WordNet
n. a coherent mass of pollen grains (as in orchids)
[also: pollinia (pl)]
Wikipedia
Pollinium, or plural pollinia, is a coherent mass of pollen grains in a plant that are the product of only one anther, but are transferred, during pollination, as a single unit. This is regularly seen in plants such as orchids and many species of milkweeds ( Asclepiadoideae). Usage of the term differs: in some orchids two masses of pollen are well attached to one another, but in other orchids there are two halves (with two separate viscidia) each of which is sometimes referred to as a pollinium.
Most orchids have waxy pollinia. These are connected to one or two elongate stipes, which in turn are attached to a sticky viscidium, a disc-shaped structure that sticks to a visiting insect.
Some orchid genera have mealy pollinia. These are tapering into a caudicle (stalk), attached to the viscidium. They extend into the middle section of the column.
The pollinarium is a collective term that means either (1) the complete set of pollinia from all the anthers of a flower, as in Asclepiadoideae, or (2) in Asclepiadoideae, a pair of pollinia and the parts that connect them (corpusculum and translator arms), or (3) in orchids, a pair of pollinia with two viscidia and the other connecting parts.
Image:Pollinia Phalaenopsis (1).jpg|The waxy pollinia of a Phalaenopsis Image:Phaleanopsis pollinia.jpg|Pollinia of a Phalaenopsis orchid Image:Ophrys apifera flower2-der.jpg|Pollinium of Ophrys apifera cinnamomea with pollinium 1.jpg|Male bee (Eucera cinnamomea) with pollinium attached to its head on Antelope Horn-April 2015.JPG|Honeybee on antelope horn ( Asclepias asperula) with pollinia attached to legs