Listen "The Corpse Flower: Why It Smells Like Death | Smartest Year Ever (Nov 2, 2025)"
Episode Synopsis
The Corpse Flower, or Amorphophallus titanum, is one of nature’s strangest performances—a rare botanical spectacle that looks magnificent but smells like death. In this Fright Facts Week episode of Smartest Year Ever, Gordy dives into the bizarre science and history of the world’s largest and smelliest flower, uncovering how evolution engineered this tropical monster to mimic the scent of decay.From its chemical cocktail of putrescine, cadaverine, and dimethyl trisulfide to the way its spadix heats up like a human body, every grotesque detail serves a purpose. You’ll discover why crowds still line up for hours to catch a whiff, how it lures carrion beetles and flesh flies, and why this stinking spectacle only blooms once every decade.If you think flowers are just pretty and fragrant, think again. This one could make you gag—and that’s exactly how it survives.#Titanarum #flowers #botanyfacts #CorpseFlower #WeirdNature #Botany #FunFacts #ScienceFacts #DailyFactsMusic thanks to Zapsplat.Sources:Beccari, O. (1878). Piante Omonime del Genere Amorphophallus. Florence.National Geographic. (2018). Corpse Flower: Why Does This Giant Bloom Smell So Terrible?Smithsonian Magazine. (2016). Why the Corpse Flower Smells So Bad.U.S. Botanic Garden. (2017). Amorphophallus titanum: Bloom Facts and Life Cycle.Kew Gardens Archives. (1889). First Recorded Bloom of Amorphophallus titanum Outside Indonesia.BBC Science Focus. (2020). The Science Behind the Corpse Flower’s Terrible Stench.Nisyawati & Wiriadinata, H. (1998). Pollination and Bloom Cycle of Amorphophallus titanum. Indonesian Journal of Botany.
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.