Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Amorphophallus
Genus of flowering plants From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Amorphophallus is a large genus of some 200 tropical and subtropical tuberous herbaceous plants from the arum family (Araceae), native to Asia, Africa, Australia and various oceanic islands.[2][3] The genus includes the Titan arum (A. titanum) of Indonesia, which has the largest inflorescence in the genus, and is known as the 'corpse flower' for the pungent odour it produces during its flowering period, which can take up to seven years of growth before it occurs.[4]
A few species are edible as "famine foods" after careful preparation to remove irritating chemicals.[5]
Remove ads
History
The oldest systematic record of the plants was in 1692, when Van Rheede tot Drakenstein published descriptions of two plants. The name "Amorphophallus" was first mentioned in 1834 by the Dutch botanist Blume[6] from Ancient Greek αμορφος amorphos "without form, misshapen" and φαλλος phallos "penis", referring to the shape of the prominent spadix.[citation needed] Between 1876 and 1911, Engler[who?] merged a number of other genera into Amorphophallus, with a final monograph published in 1911.[6]
Remove ads
Distribution
These are typical lowland plants, growing in the tropical and subtropical zones of the paleotropics, from West Africa through the Pacific Islands. None of them are found in the Americas, although a remarkably similar but not closely related genus, Dracontium, has evolved there. Most species are endemic. They grow preferentially on disturbed grounds, such as secondary forests.[7]
Description
Summarize
Perspective
![]() | This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (January 2025) |


These small to massive plants grow from a subterranean tuber. Amorphophallus tubers vary greatly from species to species, from the quite uniformly globose tuber of A. konjac to the elongated tubers of A. longituberosus and A. macrorhizus to the bizarre clustered rootstock of A. coaetaneus. It can grow up to 6 feet (1.8 m) in height and the weight of these tubers range from as little as ten grams (3/10ths of an ounce) in Amorphophallus pusillus of Vietnam[8] to as much as 305 pounds (139 kg) for Amorphophallus titanum, a 14,000 fold difference in weight. From the top of this tuber a single leaf, which can be several meters across in larger species, is produced atop a trunk-like petiole followed, on maturity, by a single inflorescence. This leaf consists of a vertical leaf stalk and a horizontal blade, which may consist of a number of small leaflets. The leaf lasts one growing season. The peduncle (the primary flower stalk) can be long or short.
As is typical of the Arum family, these species develop an inflorescence consisting of an elongate or ovate spathe (a sheathing bract) which usually envelops the spadix (a flower spike with a fleshy axis). The spathe can have different colors, but mostly brownish-purple or whitish-green. On the inside, they contain ridges or warts, functioning as insect traps.
The plants are monoecious. The spadix has tiny flowers: female flowers, no more than a pistil, at the bottom, then male flowers, each with one stamen, and then a blank sterile area. This last part, called 'the appendix', consists of sterile flowers, called staminodes, and can be especially large. The flowers do not have corollas.
Mature female flowers are usually receptive for only one day. In many species, the inflorescence emits a scent of decaying flesh in order to attract insects, though a number of species give off a pleasant odor. Through a number of ingenious insect traps, pollinating insects that entered a spathe when female flowers were receptive remain inside the spathe for about one day while male flowers mature and release pollen. Pollen falls on these insects, and they carry pollen as they exit the spathe and can pollinate female flowers in another spathe. Amorphophallus species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera (butterfly and moth) species including Palpifer sexnotatus and Palpifer sordida.
Pollinated flowers usually each develop into a globose berry, a fruit. The berries are red, orange-red, white, white and yellow, or blue, depending on the species.
Notable species
The species Amorphophallus titanum, 'corpse flower' or titan arum, has the world's largest unbranched inflorescence, with a height of up to 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) and a width of 1.5 metres (4.9 ft).[citation needed] After an over 1.2 metres (3.9 ft)-tall flower opened at Chicago Botanic Gardens on September 29, 2015, thousands lined up to see and smell it. The floriculturalist described it as smelling "like roadkill, a barnyard, a dirty diaper, very strong, a little bit of mothball smell too". Native to the Indonesian rainforest, it takes about 10 years to blossom. Dubbed "Alice", its bloom was broadcast via live webcam. It is one of two plants at the Chicago Botanic Gardens, which kept open until 2 am on September 30 to accommodate visitors.[9]
A runner-up is Amorphophallus gigas, which is taller, but has a somewhat smaller inflorescence.[citation needed]
Amorphophallus konjac tubers are used to make konnyaku (コンニャク), a Japanese thickening agent and edible jelly containing glucomannan.[10]
Some species are called voodoo-lily, as are some species of Typhonium (also in the Araceae).[11][12]
Remove ads
Taxonomy and systematics
Summarize
Perspective
Amorphophallus Subgenera | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The genus was divided into 4 subgenera based on phylogenetic analysis in 2017,[13] with a number of SE Asian genera currently unplaced:
Subgenus Amorphophallus
Subgenus Scutrandrium Hett. & Claudel
Subgenus Metandrium Stapf.
Subgenus Afrophallus Hett. & Claudel
Subgenus unplaced
- Amorphophallus gliruroides Engl. – Myanmar
- Amorphophallus incurvatus Alderw. – Sumatra
- Amorphophallus lyratus (Roxb.) Kunth – SE India
- Amorphophallus mekongensis Engl. & Gehrm. – Indochina
- Amorphophallus paucisectus Alderw. – Sumatra
- Amorphophallus perakensis Engl. – Peninsula Malaysia
Remove ads
References
Bibliography
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads