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How to Survive shares why the corpse flower can be dangerous and how to protect yourself from its harmful effects. Discover ...
Lucy the corpse flower is getting ready to bloom at the Missouri Botanical Garden, in all her stinky glory. Garden officials ...
After last year’s incredible Washington D.C. corpse flower showing—where two of these rare flowers bloomed almost at the same ...
The Missouri Botanical Garden announced one of its rare corpse flowers will soon bloom for the first time in its 7-year life.
Many plants smell "good" — to humans that is — but some go several steps in the other direction, presenting themselves to the ...
Reiman Gardens is selling merch commemorating the 12-year-old corpse flower's 2025 bloom. Online orders for a special Stink ...
The Missouri Botanical Garden announced that one of its titan arums, or "corpse flowers," is likely to bloom sometime between May 29 and June 5. This particular plant, named Lucy, is 7 years old ...
Visitors flock to botanic gardens when their corpse flowers are in bloom. But these charismatic plants are threatened by inbreeding and low genetic diversity, in part due to spotty recordkeeping ...
You don't often find crowds of people flocking together to take in the pungent scent of rotting flesh, but that's exactly what happens every time a corpse flower blooms at a public garden.
Plant biologists examined records for nearly 1,200 individual corpse flower plants from 111 institutions around the world. The data and records were severely lacking and not standardized.
A rare flower with a pungent odour that has been likened to decaying flesh, rotten eggs and sewage has bloomed in Australia - the third such flowering in recent months. The corpse flower ...
An Amorphophallus titanum or titan arum, commonly known as the corpse flower, has bloomed at the Australian National Botanic Gardens in Canberra for the first time. The 15-year-old plant started ...