

Plant Science & Conservation
Garden Stories
Spike鈥檚 Teachable Moment
What an amazing plant science moment occurred in the Semitropical Greenhouse this morning, as a fascinated crowd gathered to see what was happening with Spike, the titan arum.
On Saturday, it was determined that Spike had run out of the energy it needed to continue its bloom cycle. Spike is powered by energy from the sun, stored in its beach-ball-sized corm鈥攁 tuber-like underground structure. A tremendous amount of energy goes into producing the single, giant flower structure that a titan can send up in its first decade or so of life (Spike is about 12 years old).
OVERHEARD: 鈥淚 WISH MY BIOLOGY TEACHER WAS HERE.鈥
As this week鈥檚 expected bloom time passed, our science and horticultural staff went into action. Spike wasn鈥檛 dying鈥攂ut the flower structure had stopped maturing, and the spathe did not open. On Friday, Dr. Shannon Still, conservation scientist, and Tim Pollak, the floriculturist who had raised Spike from a seed, peeked inside the frilly spathe to check for pollen.
鈥淚f there had been pollen, it would have been all over my hand,鈥 Still said. Pollen鈥檚 absence meant that the male and female flowers might not be fully developed. The possibility remained that pollen might still develop, even though the spathe would not open鈥攁nd THAT led to the decision to remove the 鈥渇rozen鈥 spathe to see what was happening with the real flowers inside.
OVERHEARD: 鈥淲E WERE WATCHING IT EVERY DAY. EVERY 20 MINUTES OR SO.鈥
First, Still assembled a working kit: scalpel, probes, test tubes, paintbrushes and a 鈥渟coopula鈥 (to collect pollen).
At 10 a.m. today, staff gathered for the delicate procedure. Pollak and Still fist bumped鈥nd the operation began.
As Still began cutting just above the peduncle (stalk), the crowd grew quiet. Dr. Pat Herendeen, senior director, Systematics and Evolutionary Biology, narrated for the crowd. As the spathe started to come away from the towering spadix, the internal color started to be visible.
Left: A cross-section of the spathe reveals the cell structure inside. Right: A close-up of the hundreds of male (top) and female (bottom) flowers inside Spike鈥檚 spathe.
鈥淭he spathe feels a bit like cabbage leaves, with a rubbery texture,鈥 Herendeen said. 鈥淭he color inside varies from one plant to another in nature. It is dark maroon, the color of rotting meat, which is meant to attract the flies and beetles that are the plant鈥檚 natural pollinators.鈥
Pollak held the spathe steady as Still continued to free it from the stalk. With one last cut, it came free鈥攁nd the crowd gasped as the inside of the spathe was unfurled and the true flowers at the base of the spadix were revealed鈥攑ale rows of bumpy-looking male flowers atop a strip of orange and brown female flowers.
Left: Tim Pollak and Shannon Still make the first cut. Right: Tim Pollak reveals the spathe鈥檚 ravishing color.
Herendeen answered as questions flew: The male flowers do not appear to have produced pollen yet. Spike鈥檚 fabled scent is only detectable very close up to the spathe鈥攎uch less apparent than it was earlier in the week.
Cameras focused in on the flower structure, as Still and Pollak carried the two large pieces of the cut-away spathe over to the crowd. Hands reached out for a touch; noses leaned in for a sniff. Spike鈥檚 spathe was set out on a gallery table so that everyone could touch and admire it before it begins to wilt.
OVERHEARD: 鈥淪PIKE WAS THE TOPIC OF DINNER CONVERSATION WITH OUR TWO SONS EVERY NIGHT FOR THE PAST WEEK.鈥
While television camera crews stepped in for close-ups on the plant鈥檚 flowers, interviewers questioned the scientists: Where does the scent come from? (It鈥檚 believed that the tall appendix helps produce the scent, though scientists are also investigating the female flowers themselves.) Would Spike bloom again? (Probably, but the corm would have to recover first, by sending up an annual leaf for a few years to gather more energy.)
Cross-legged on the floor opposite Spike sat Chicago artist Heeyoung Kim, who sketched intently during the entire process. Her intricate pencil markings captured Spike鈥檚 pleats and tightly clustered flowers鈥攖he beginnings of a botanical illustration that could inform future scientists studying the titan arum鈥檚 beautiful structure for years to come.
We have been so thrilled with the intensity of interest in Spike鈥攊t鈥檚 not every day that crowds gather to watch a plant grow! We鈥檒l continue to keep you posted about possible pollen development, our scientists鈥 thoughts about Spike鈥檚 arrested development, and on the progress of the eight other titan arums now growing in our production greenhouses.
Left: What a great vibe from the gathered crowd! Right: Kris Jarantoski, executive vice president and director, explains Spike鈥檚 spathe to a young visitor.
For more information please visit our titan arum page.