Titan arum
Odours: foul and fragrant
Many of the 170 or so species of Amorphophallus produce
a variety of obnoxious odours ranging from rotting meat, dung and
rancid cheese to a nauseating gaseous stench. Size does not always
equate to their ability to generate a stink. Relative to A. titanum,
the inflorescence of A. bulbifer is small, yet the gaseous
stench it produces can make working in a glasshouse with it a sickening
experience, as staff at Kew can testify. Some Amorphophallus
species, however, produce pleasant odours; for example, A. haematospadix
smells of bananas while A. dunnii has the odour of freshly
chopped carrots.
Odours have been used to classify Amorphophallus species
in the past, but the human nose can be deceived. When plants in
the Princess of Wales Conservatory flowered in 1996, 2002 and 2003,
scientist Geoffrey Kite from Kews Jodrell Laboratory investigated
the obnoxious smells that they produced. The strongest smells occurred
on two consecutive evenings, firstly when the female flowers were
ready for pollination and then when the male flowers were ready
to shed their pollen.
The major components detected in the carrion and gaseous odours
are the sulphur-containing compounds dimethyldisulphide and dimethyltrisulphide.
The banana odour of A. haematospadix appears to be due to
isoamyl acetate while the carrot odour of A. dunnii consists
almost entirely of 1-phenylethylacetate; the chocolate odour of
A. manta has yet to be analysed.
One aim of the work is to compare the chemical nature of the odours
with a modern classification of the genus based on DNA sequencing
and a full scale morphological analysis. The chemical constituents
of the odours might also provide clues to the pollinators of these
plants since, for most species, the pollinators remain a mystery.
The few observations available are for foul-smelling species and
these seem to attract carrion beetles. This is in accordance with
chemical data on the odour; dimethyldisulphide is known to attract
carrion feeding or breeding insects and is used in a commercial
lure for screw-worm flies.
Find out more
Search
Kew's electronic Plant Information Centre for scientific
information about Amorphophallus titanum
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