HomeNewsIndiaThe neelakurinji bloom is wilting with time

The neelakurinji bloom is wilting with time

The Western Ghats are home to 99 percent of the 150 Strobilanthes species in India and are considered the hotspot for this genus. Among them is the neelakurinji flower that is said to bloom once in 12 years.

January 22, 2024 / 18:10 IST
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Strobilanthes sessilis var. sessilioides. Photo by Abhishek N. Chinnappa. (Mongabay)
Strobilanthes sessilis var. sessilioides. Photo by Abhishek N. Chinnappa. (Mongabay)

Marked by its monocarpic nature and gregarious flowering, Strobilanthes flowering plant is best known for its species diversity.

Encroachment of grasslands for plantations and tourism as well as road networks and other linear infrastructure cutting through forests, have reduced its habitat, resulting in reduced occurrence of mass bloom.

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Arathi Menon

After two consecutive years of incessant rains, floods and landslides in the month of August, the smallest district in Karnataka, Kodagu, was in for a surprise this year. The famous Neelakurinji flowered gregariously across a few hills. It soon caught the media’s attention and both tourists and local residents thronged the hills of Kotte Betta and Mandalpatti to take in the beautiful sight. After the 2018 mass flowering in Kerala, this was the first time that Neelakurinji was blooming on a large scale. Social media buzzed with photos of tiny blue flowers that had flowered in unison, unrolling a breathtaking lilac carpet across the hills. Private tour companies rose to the occasion and went all out to help tourists get a glimpse of the rare event, even making choppers available for those who were willing to spend to get an aerial view of the bloom that happens once in a blue moon.