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June 29, 2004
The corpse plant is blooming!










The corpse flower is about to bloom!

I'm very excited. The corpse flower, in case you don't know, is nature's single-most revolting plant. When one of these three-foot-tall beauties opens up, it gives off the scent of rotting flesh. The University of Connecticut has managed to cultivate one, the first example in the northeast in 60 years, and any day now it's due to open up.

If you're lucky enough to be nearby when it opens, here's how University officials describe the smell:

The corpse flower is specifically adapted to attract carrion flies and beetles, which ferry pollen between plants so they can produce seed, a job accomplished for more ordinary plants by bees or butterflies. The colors of the corpse flower — a sickly yellow and blackish purple -- imitate a pot roast that sat out in the sun for a week. The fragrance is universally described as being powerful and revolting, with elements of old socks, dead fish and rotten vegetables. As if that isn't weird enough, the corpse flower is actually warm-blooded, heating itself up at the height of flowering, probably to help spread its putrid odor. All of this is totally irresistible to flies, who must think they've chanced upon a dead elephant, and are tricked into pollinating the plant.

Kind of like Enron investors. At any rate, there's a web cam on that page I linked to above, so you can check in periodically to watch U of Connecticut botanists retching uncontrollably.

Posted by Clive Thompson at June 29, 2004 12:19 AM

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Comments

the corpse flower- believe it or not, the 'official flower' of the bronx for many many years. adaption or adoption?

go red sox!

Posted by: chris at June 29, 2004 12:41 PM

Is that actually true?

Posted by: Clive at June 29, 2004 1:02 PM

absolutely true- first cultivated in north america in 1937, in the BX. the sight of the huge phallic bloom inspired the borough president to claim it as the bronx's own.

amorphophallus titanum in the hizz-ouse!

Posted by: chris at June 29, 2004 2:04 PM

This is probably not the best way to cultivate (harhar!) interest in all things botanical.
Note to visitors: please eat lunch AFTERWARDS!
Tara Abbey, horticulturist

Posted by: Tara Abbey at June 29, 2004 4:17 PM

interesting article about warm-blooded and often stinky plants here:
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20031213/bob9.asp

Posted by: chris at June 29, 2004 5:11 PM

Completely foul!!! Your most disgusting posting to date.... Keep up the good work Clive.

Posted by: Uncle Rob at June 29, 2004 10:33 PM

I exist to serve!

Posted by: Clive at June 29, 2004 11:10 PM

servio ergo sum!

Posted by: ditto at June 30, 2004 12:54 PM

HI,I'm Jeni from Mystic. I need to know what campus at UConn this is located at..
Thanks, Jeni Moore

Posted by: Jeni Moore at July 5, 2004 11:30 AM

It has already semi bloomed and has began to whither... too bad. I didn't get to fully bloom. I work on the storrs campus and got to see it at its best. Hurry up if you want to catch a glimps of the plant it has already began to close but the full plant will die with in the next few days.

Posted by: Christina at July 7, 2004 8:52 PM

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