How a St. Louis scientist is decoding the ‘invisible language’ between plants and pollinators episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 19, 2026 · 23 MIN

How a St. Louis scientist is decoding the ‘invisible language’ between plants and pollinators

from St. Louis on the Air

Scientists are beginning to decode how floral scents attract specific pollinators. Mónica Carlsen of the Missouri Botanical Garden is taking her research of anthuriums, a common household plant known for their wide leaves and protruding spike, from the Climatron and will soon travel to Colombia to capture plant scents in the wild, aiming to better understand the “invisible language” between plants and pollinators. We also hear from Stephen and Peter Sachs Museum curator Nezka Pfeifer about the museum’s latest exhibit “Smelling the Bouquet: Plants and Scents in the Garden.”

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How a St. Louis scientist is decoding the ‘invisible language’ between plants and pollinators

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This episode was published on February 19, 2026.

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Scientists are beginning to decode how floral scents attract specific pollinators. Mónica Carlsen of the Missouri Botanical Garden is taking her research of anthuriums, a common household plant known for their wide leaves and protruding spike, from...

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