Titan arum
| Titan arum | ||||||||||||||
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| Amorphophallus titanum |
Both male and female flowers grow in the same inflorescence. The female flowers open first, then a day or two following, the male flowers open. This prevents the flower from self-pollenating.
After the flower dies back, a single leaf, which reaches the size of a small tree, grows from the underground corm. The leaf grows on a green stalk that branches into three sections at the top, each containing many leaflets. The leaf structure can reach up to 6 meters tall and 5 meters across. Each year, the old leaf dies and a new one grows in its place. When the corm has stored enough energy, it becomes dormant for as many as 4 months and the process repeats
First discovered in Sumatra in 1878, the plant flowers only infrequently in the wild and even more rarely when cultivated. It first flowered in cultivation at the Kew Gardens in London. In recent years the number of plants cultivated has increased, and it is not uncommon for there to be 5 or more flowering events in gardens around the world in a single year. The most recent flowerings were June 9, 2003 University of California, Davis, June 10, 2003 Kew, July 2, 2003 Le Conservatoire Botanique, Brest, and July 23, 2003 United States Botanic Garden in Washington, DC. The University of Wisconsin-Madison has a Titan arum preparing to bloom now, it's third since 2001. July 28, 2004: http://www.news.wisc.edu/titanarum2004/
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