corpse flower

The corpse flower is a gigantic, rare plant famous for its massive bloom and its powerful stench that smells like rotting meat, which is how it got the name âcorpse flower.â
What is the corpse flower?
The corpse flower, Amorphophallus titanum (also called titan arum), produces one of the largest flowering structures in the world and is considered the largest unbranched inflorescence in the plant kingdom. When it blooms, the tall central spike (spadix) is surrounded by a single huge frilly âskirtâ (spathe) that is green outside and deep, meatâred inside. It naturally grows in the tropical rainforests of Sumatra in Indonesia, but today youâre most likely to see it in big botanical gardens on special event days.
Why does it smell like a corpse?
The ârotting corpseâ smell is not a weird accident; it is the plantâs strategy to attract pollinators that normally visit dead animals.
Key points about the smell:
- It mimics the odor of decomposing flesh to attract dung beetles, flesh flies, and other carrionâloving insects.
- The bloom even warms up on the first evening so the stench spreads farther through the air, a trick similar to how real carcasses radiate heat and smell.
- The deep burgundy interior of the spathe looks like raw meat, reinforcing the illusion of a carcass to visiting insects.
Those insects then move pollen from one corpse flower to another, helping it reproduce.
How big does a corpse flower get?
The corpse flower can reach truly spectacular sizes, which is why it becomes a media and forum sensation whenever one blooms.
- The bloom (inflorescence) can grow to around 8â10 feet (about 2.4â3.1 meters) tall in cultivation.
- One recorded bloom reached approximately 10 feet 2.25 inches (about 3.1 meters), recognized as an exceptionally tall specimen.
- The plantâs single leaf (when itâs not blooming) can look like a small tree, with a âtrunkâlikeâ stalk and a canopy up to around 13 feet wide.
Because of this scale, photos often trick peopleâs eyes; many online commenters say it looks like a person, a skirt, or even someone standing upsideâdown inside the plant.
How often does it bloom?
Part of the corpse flowerâs mystique is that you almost never catch it in bloom.
- A plant may take about 7â9 years (and sometimes even longer) to produce its first bloom.
- After that, it can bloom only every few years or even once in decades, depending on how much energy it has stored.
- Each bloom is incredibly shortâlived, usually staying open and stinky for about 24â36 hours, sometimes 2â3 days at most.
Botanical gardens carefully track and publicize these events, and some, like the New York Botanical Garden, highlight notable blooms such as one in October 2025 to draw visitors.
Quick facts miniâsection
- Scientific name: Amorphophallus titanum , commonly called corpse flower or titan arum.
- Native habitat: Rainforests of Sumatra, Indonesia.
- Type of flower: An inflorescence (many tiny male and female flowers at the base of one giant spadix).
- Pollination strategy: Mimics a decomposing carcass in both smell and color to lure carrionâfeeding insects.
- Bloom duration: Typically 1â3 days before the structure collapses.
- Rarity of bloom: First bloom after many years; subsequent blooms remain unpredictable and can be years apart.
Corpse flower as a trending topic
In the last few years, each major bloom has turned into a small online event with liveâcams, lines at conservatories, and a lot of âitâs amazing but disgustingâ reactions in forums. Reddit posts in plantâ and oddityâfocused communities often show new blooms, with users describing the flower as terrifying, like a person in a dress, or simply âvery cool and gross.â Visitors frequently say seeing one in person feels like checking off a bucketâlist experience, but many also admit they would not rush to smell it again because of the intense odor.
Because blooms remain so rare and short, botanical gardens now treat them as special events, sending email alerts and posting across social platforms when a corpse flower is about to open so people can catch the brief window.
HTML table: key corpse flower facts
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Common name | Corpse flower (titan arum) |
| Scientific name | Amorphophallus titanum | [7][1]
| Native range | Sumatran rainforests in Indonesia | [1]
| Flower type | Largest unbranched inflorescence in the plant kingdom | [3][1]
| Bloom height | Typically up to about 8â10 ft (around 2.4â3.1 m) | [3][1]
| Bloom frequency | First bloom after about 7â9 years, later blooms every few years or longer | [1][3]
| Bloom duration | About 24â36 hours, sometimes up to 2â3 days | [3][1]
| Scent | Strong odor of rotting meat to attract carrion insects | [9][5][1]
| Color of spathe interior | Deep burgundy/red, resembling raw meat | [5][1]
| Pollinators | Dung beetles, flesh flies, and other carrionâfeeding insects | [9][1]
| Event status | Frequently treated as a special, ticketed or heavily promoted bloom event at botanic gardens | [5][9][3]
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.