In 1999, when the plant bloomed in the Huntington Botanical Garden in California, more than 76,000 visitors held their noses and went to see it. In ...
In 1999, when the plant bloomed in the Huntington Botanical Garden in California, more than 76,000 visitors held their noses and went to see it. In Fairchild Garden in Florida, 5,500 visitors made the trek to see the infamous blossom; and at the Botanic Garden of the University of Bonn, Germany, the line to see the flowering titan arum extended more than two miles. The corpse plant was first cultivated in the English Royal Botanic Gardens in 1887 after having been found in 1878 in Indonesia.At the onset of blooming a sulfur-based compound within the flower stalk, the plant amps up energy to produce a carrion-like small to attract pollinators such as carrion beetles or flesh flies. The pollinators have about two days to find the plant and complete the deed as the bloom lasts no more than three days. A flowering stalk can be seven to 12 feet in height and three to four feet in diameter. After the bloom dies, a leaf stalk emerges in all it's glory.Wow, Zhatso?
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