Wiffing the Hawiian Stinkhorn mushroom can cause female orgasm

Strange Mushroom Scent Triggers Female Orgasms?
An article in the International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms describes a strange and wonderful practice in Hawaii: women gather together to search for a particular mushroom. When they find it, they sniff it. The scent of this mushroom causes sexual arousal, often to the point of orgasm.
The article describes a trial where 20 men and 16 women were asked to smell the mushroom. All of the men found the smell disgusting. All the women showed signs of arousal, and six experienced orgasm from the smell. The study noted that the women who did climax were the first women to smell it, while those who smelled it later (when it was older and weaker) noticed fewer effects.
One woman said she wanted to "gobble it up."
http://www.aphrodisiology.com/mushroom-female-aphrodisiac Stinkhorns usually do stink. They have evolved to spread their spores by attracting flies - which is easy when you smell fetid like rotting flesh. But apparently this type of Dictyphora tries to smell bad, nasty and naughty instead of plain foul. And it randomly mutated to produce some type of pheromone or neurotransmitter or drug.
The mushroom in question is described as a new species in the genus Dictyphora or Phallus, or possibly as a new variety of a known species, Dictyphora indusiata.
It's no coincidence that the spelling for the genus Phallus looks like the word phallus, which is Latin for dick. Stinkhorns are definitely phallic symbols - and one variety may be much more than a symbol, as it appears to rock her world in a way that mere mortals cannot.