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7 plants and trees that flower only once in their lifetime, and where you can find them

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 9, 2025, 19:00 IST
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7 plants and trees that flower only once in their lifetime, and where you can find them

Some plants bloom every year; others surprise you once a decade. But a rare group of species takes patience to a breathtaking extreme, they flower only once, after which the entire plant or tree dies. This unique life strategy, known as monocarpy, results in some of the most extraordinary and dramatic botanical spectacles on Earth. Here are seven remarkable plants and trees that bloom just once in their lifetime, and where you can witness them.

2/8

Bamboo

Many bamboo species follow long and mysterious flowering cycles that range from 20 to 120 years, and some bloom in synchronised global waves, even when grown thousands of kilometres apart. These mass flowering events are often followed by large-scale die-offs, reshaping entire ecosystems. In India’s Northeast, bamboo flowering has historically triggered rodent population booms and crop devastation. In countries like Japan and China, such blooms are documented as major ecological events because they occur so rarely.

3/8

Century plant

Found in Mexico (native); also widely grown in the US Southwest, Mediterranean, India, Australia, century plant is one of the world’s most famous monocarpic plants. It doesn’t actually take a century to bloom, but it does live for decades. After 20–30 years, it summons all its stored energy to grow a massive flower stalk up to 8–9 metres high. The towering stem bursts into yellow blossoms attracting birds, bats, and insects. Once the plant sets seed, it dies, leaving behind offsets (“pups”) to continue the lineage.

4/8

Talipot Palm

Found in India (Kerala, Tamil Nadu), Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Thailand, the talipot palm holds the record for one of the largest flower clusters of any plant, producing a spectacular inflorescence up to 7 metres long, packed with millions of tiny flowers. It lives for 60–80 years, flowering only at the very end. After fruiting, the palm slowly declines and dies

5/8

Puya Raimondii

Also known as Queen of the Andes, the Puya Raimondii, is found in the high Andes of Peru and Bolivia. It is nothing short of a botanical wonder. It is one of the tallest flowering plants on Earth, reaching 10–12 metres when in bloom. This high-altitude species may take 80–100 years before it flowers, producing a conical tower of more than 20,000 blossoms that attracts birds from across the Andes. After this phenomenal display, the plant dies.

6/8

Strobilanthes kunthiana

Most popularly known as Neelakurinji, the strobilanthes kunthiana is found in the Western Ghats, especially Munnar and Kodaikanal. Every 12 years, the legendary Neelakurinji turns the slopes of the Western Ghats into a sea of purplish-blue. This mass flowering is so iconic that the Kurinji bloom is woven deeply into the region’s cultural identity. The last bloom in 2018 drew travellers from across India and abroad; the next full bloom in Munnar is expected around 2030. After each individual plants flowers, it dies.

7/8

Fishtail palm

The fishtail palm is found in India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Southeast Asia. It is named for its leaf shape resembling a fish’s tail, this palm has an unusual flowering pattern. It blooms sequentially, starting from the top of the trunk and moving downward over several years. When the final cluster of flowers, the lowest one, blooms, the tree’s life cycle concludes, and the entire palm dies.

8/8

Tachigali versicolor

Also known as Suicide Tree, the Tachigali versicolor is found in Central & South America, especially Panama. This rainforest giant lives up to its dramatic nickname. The Tachigali versicolor grows tall for several decades, then produces a massive bloom, sometimes thousands of flowers, all at once. After releasing its seeds, the tree dies within months. Its death, however, enriches the forest floor with nutrients, enabling seedlings to thrive.

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Copyright © Jun 5, 2026, 12.23PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service