Blooming marvellous Amorphophallus
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Amorphophallus titanum
At over two and a half metres tall and with a smell like rotting meat, no-one’s going to put this baby in a corner.
In its native habitat, the Amorphophallus titanum blooms once, then dies. Thanks to the care of our horticulturists, our ‘New Reekie’ recently bloomed for the fifth time and the research being undertaken by our scientists will help us understand and protect this fascinating yet endangered plant.
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Save the Palm Houses
For over 200 years, the Palm Houses have provided a haven for incredible and endangered plants. But after two centuries of withstanding Scottish weather, they are now in need of vital restoration.
Please support our campaign to ensure the Palm Houses can once again open their doors.
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New Reekie
Time | Description |
[Dr Mark Hughes, Tropical Diversity Botanist] This plant's so special, first of all, because of its amazing appearance, so it's a real joy for visitors, and it's a great connection between people and plant diversity, and it's a really excellent representative of the endangered tropical flora that we're working here so hard to conserve as well. We've been working with Chicago Botanic Garden to understand how many times the plant's been introduced into cultivation, to understand the genetic diversity of the plants in cultivation as well, so we've done some DNA fingerprinting work, and this is gonna help us make breeding pairs so we can preserve the genetic diversity of this endangered plant in cultivation. | |
[Paulina Maciejewska-Daruk, Glasshouse Horticulturist] To me, it smelled always like a food bin when it's ready for collection, but for other people it smelled like rotting meat or fish, old socks, cheese and onion, this kind of smell. The only purpose of the plant producing that kind of smell is to attract pollinators. In this case, there would be flies and carrion beetles that would feast on rotting flesh. | |
[Nate Kelso, Glasshouse Horticulturist] This plant has been really unusual in that we've had it flowering five times. We thought when it first flowered that it would only go the once, and then it might die afterwards, but we've managed to keep it going for a long time, because once the flower died down, the corm was still exceptionally big, and as long as it has a corm that it can still produce a leaf from, it's going to keep going pretty much infinitely. |