In Australia, thousands of people wait in line to see the foul- smelling "corpse flower," which only blooms once every ten years.
gambar Thousands of people are waiting to see and smell a unique plant in Geelong, Australia,
which is located just south of Melbourne.
One guest, coughing and choking through his fingers, told CNN station Nine News,
"It is rank." The toddler was more direct when he said, "It smells like dead possum."
The so- called "corpse flower,"
or Amorphophallus Titanum (often abbreviated as Titan Arum),
gets its name from the foul stench it emits during bloom, which draws
pollinators like flies and beetles. However, it is a highly
sought-after event that attracts large crowds since it blooms erratically,
sometimes just once every ten years, and each bloom lasts only 24 to 48 hours.
Horticulturists have been observing and waiting for the emergence
of a bud on this plant for years, but it was only sent to Geelong Botanic
Garden in 2021 by the State Herbarium in Adelaide, South Australia.
After days of waiting, the plant finally opened on Monday, November 11.
Reese McIlvena, the manager of Geelong Parks, told Nine News that roughly
5,000 people came to visit it on that first day.
According to the city website, tourists have so far compared the odor
to that of a filthy pond or a dead mouse.
Until Tuesday evening, when the bloom is anticipated to end,
the botanic garden will remain open continuously.
The garden also provides a webcast of the corpse flower for those who
can not attend in person. According to the city website, the livestream has
had tens of thousands of views thus far, with people coming from all around the world.
The plant's different stages of blooming, including the
upright column with hundreds of tiny flowers at its base and the gentle
furling of the frilly leaf at its base that will eventually cover
up around the tall yellow spadix at its center, have drawn some visitors
back time and time again.
According to Nine News, Ali Wastie, the chief executive of the City of Greater Geelong,
stated, "As the Geelong Botanic Gardens opens its doors for this
spectacular event, we can recognize the critical
role that botanic gardens play in promoting rare and distinctive plant species."
"The largest species of carrion flower, the endangered Titan Arum,
needs to be preserved because its wild population is declining."
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists the plant, which
is native to Indonesia, as "endangered."
According to the IUCN, land degradation and deforestation have devastated its
natural habitat of Sumatran forest, with a large portion of the area being turned
into plantations for oil palm, paper, or lumber.
The plant only blooms a few times during its existence, as it can live
for up to 30 to 40 years.
Only a few hundred of these plants are thought to remain in the wild,
according to the IUCN.
According to the IUCN, it is currently officially protected in Indonesia and is
grown in dozens of botanic gardens worldwide, including one in California that the public
elected to call "Darth Vapor," to aid in its survival.
Source edition.cnn.com
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