Rare "Corpse Flower" Blooms at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo

After 13 Years of Waiting the Titan Arum Plant Has Bloomed in Cleveland

rosemeadow
What can get to be 10 feet tall, 3-4 feet wide, smells like a rotting body, and took 13 years to appear? It would be the rare titan arum plant at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo! Better known as the "corpse flower," this unusual bloom will be on display through the end of this week at the zoo.

Cleveland's corpse flower opened up on Monday, July 23, 2007. A native of the Jambi Province in the southern part of the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, it was discovered in 1878 by the Italian botanist, Odoardo Beccari. It seldom blooms in its native rainforest, but it's even rarer for it to bloom in captivity. The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is joining only 20 other institutions who have had a successful titan arum plant bloom in the United States.

"We've waited so long for this day, and we're really thrilled to have such a rare blooming happen at the Zoo," said Don Krock, a Zoo Horticulturist in a press release. "It's a beautiful sight to see, but the smell is really bad."

The titan arum is the largest flower in the world and can attribute its foul odor to sulfur-based chemicals. Some say it smells like rotten fish, but one thing is for certain...it wreaks. Natives of Sumatra can detect its scent up to fifty yards away. The main reason for its pungent smell is to attract beetles and other insects that feed on carrion. While they are inside of the bloom looking for dead meat, they end up pollinating the foul flowers.

The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo became the proud owner of the titan arum plant way back in 1994 from the National Aquarium in Baltimore, Maryland. After 13 long years of waiting, the zoo horticulturists began to notice changes that indicated an impending bloom about one-and-a-half weeks ago. Unfortunately, the bloom is only in its full glory for a mere day. Each day, thereafter, its beauty and stench begin to disperse. However, due to its rarity, the zoo has chosen to leave it on display through the end of the week in the rain forest.

Expect to wait a little bit to get a glimpse of the titan arum due to the intense interest of the bloom. Regular admission is all that's required to get in and it is located in the zoo's Rainforest area. The zoo hours are Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and weekends until 7 p.m.

Published by rosemeadow

A conservative, stay-at-home mother to three children.  View profile

11 Comments

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  • Rob11/5/2010

    Spelling.... Wreak is cute, but reek is right.

  • Beth Callahan7/27/2007

    Glad I have never smelled one. :) However, the plant is oddly pretty...

  • K. Ray7/27/2007

    I'm glad I can't smell it through the computer screen! I can't say that it's beautiful, but it's definitely interesting. Great article!

  • M.S.Medina7/26/2007

    We have one of these things in Fullerton, Ca. at the arboritum. Every year when it blooms they do a crazy article in the paper about it. I have no desire to smell it though. Good article.

  • Charlotte Kuchinsky7/26/2007

    Interesting but they don't sound like any flower I want to see first hand.

  • T.H.Pankey7/26/2007

    Pewwwww! I remember hearing about this kind of flower along the way. Great catch of an article!-although it stinks. Betcha they don't have these in beautiful Applachia! Used to live in Dalton, GA. Kind of know the Blue Ridge Mtns.

  • Lisa Riggs7/25/2007

    Great article Alice! I have never heard of the corpse flower before. Really interesting and well written.

  • Christopher Jones7/25/2007

    Greatest flower ever...From afar anyway.

  • Ada Noll7/25/2007

    I've never seen one of these before. My mother has a plant though that is really pretty, but it SMELLS like decay. I need to ask her what the name of it is.

    Nice article. It was really a great read.

  • Sophie7/25/2007

    I've heard of the corpse flower before. I'm just glad I have never been close enough to smell one!
    Sophie

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