Saturday, January 04, 2020

Biggest bloom: 'World's largest' flower spotted in Indonesia


This handout picture taken on January 2, 2020 and released on January 3 by the Sumatra 
Barat Nature Conservation Agency (BKSDA) shows a giant Rafflesia tuan-mudae—a fleshy 
red flower with white blister-like spots on its enormous petals and measuring a whopping
 111 centimeters (3.6 feet) in diameter at the Maninjau nature preserve in Agam, West Sumatra.
Handout/West Sumatra BKSDA/AFP
Biggest bloom: 'World's largest' flower spotted in Indonesia
(Agence France-Presse) - January 3, 2020 - 6:35pm
PADANG, Indonesia — Indonesian conservationists say they've spotted the biggest specimen ever of what's already been billed as one of the world's largest flowers.
The giant Rafflesia tuan-mudae—a fleshy red flower with white blister-like spots on its enormous petals—came in at a whopping 111 centimeters (3.6 foot) in diameter.
That's bigger than the previous record of 107 centimeters on a bloom also found in the jungles of West Sumatra several years ago.
"This is the largest Rafflesia tuan-mudae that has ever been documented," said Ade Putra at the Agam Conservation Agency in Sumatra.
The flower's bloom will only last about one week before it will wither and rot, he added.
It was named Rafflesia after British colonialist Sir Stamford Raffles who spotted one in Indonesia in the early 19th Century.
The species grows in several Southeast Asian countries, including the Philippines where a 100 centimeter specimen was recorded.
The parasitic bloom, sometimes referred to as corpse flower, mimics the stench of rotting meat to attract insects.
Sharing that noxious smell is Indonesia's Amorphophallus titanum, a phallus-shaped flower that can reach heights of up to three meters (10 feet).

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