Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Inside: Four members of a family graduate from LBCC.

Titan arum, or corpse flower, is a sight to behold but an odor to dread when it blooms

- By Hunter Lee hlee@scng.com

Seeing it is not the most important part of believing it — you only have to smell it.

“Phil,” Cal State Long Beach’s celebrity corpse flower bloomed for the second time in two years Monday evening, a quick turnaround for the putrid-smelling plant that normally unfurls once a decade. The smell can be described as dirty laundry, excessive body odor, or as its more grim namesake implies — like rotten flesh.

In 2019, when Phil first bloomed, thousands of people eager to take in the odd aroma for themselves flocked to the campus. But because of the CSULB’s coronaviru­s health and safety guidelines, the rare opportunit­y to witness its blooming was instead livestream­ed by the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematic­s to the public.

The corpse flower — also known as titan arum — is native to the rain forests of Sumatra. Its regular bloom cycle can take anywhere between five-to-10 years, but only lasts around 24 hours. But with proper care, the blooms can happen every two-tothree years, said Brian Thorson, CSULB’s botanical curator technician.

“We feed it a very nutrientde­nse fertilizer,” Thorson said, “and in the greenhouse’s humid environmen­t, it’s the ideal conditions for it to grow.”

Thorson, who joined CSULB

in 2008, has collected a variety of plants over the years, including the Phil, and a second corpse flower named Laura.

But now that it has completed its bloom cycle, the fetid flower will soon die — though Phil will live on. The living part of the plant lies undergroun­d, Thorson

said, through its stem and roots. It is considered perennial, which means Phil could be around for a long time to come.

And when Phil or Laura next spread their smell across campus, Thorson said he hopes the public will be able to experience it.

“It’s great to see all these people on campus interested in what’s going on here,” Thorson said. “Seeing the faces and reactions to the smell doesn’t get old.”

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 ?? HUNTER LEE STAFF ?? Phil the titan arum came into bloom for the second time since 2019 on Monday night at Cal State Long Beach. A native to Sumatran rainforest­s, the plant is called the corpse flower for the stench released during its bloom.
HUNTER LEE STAFF Phil the titan arum came into bloom for the second time since 2019 on Monday night at Cal State Long Beach. A native to Sumatran rainforest­s, the plant is called the corpse flower for the stench released during its bloom.
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