Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. DENVER (KDVR) — Dozens of people lined up at the Plant Growth Facility Conservatory at Colorado State University in Fort Collins ...
With a stench reminiscent of rotting flesh and a bloom that’s over 4 feet tall and 4 feet wide, the corpse flower is seemingly straight out of Jurassic Park. It drew visitors from across San Luis ...
Australian collections of the endangered and notoriously unpredictable flowers have popped off in recent years, as ‘personas’ like Putricia, Stinkerella and Smellanie prove a hit with nosy spectators ...
Sign up for the Gazette's morning newsletter and get essential news each day. NORTHAMPTON — The Smith College Botanic Garden is celebrating a rare and short-lived ...
The corpse flower is endangered for a multitude of reasons, including climate change, habitat destruction, and invasive species. But now, a new threat has been added to the list: incomplete historical ...
Such a big stink over a big flower. The Amorphophallus Titanum, also known as the corpse flower, is nearly ready to bloom at the Tucson Botanical Gardens in Arizona. To get to the point of blooming, ...
The corpse flower is native to Sumatra, Indonesia, and there are estimated to be fewer than 1,000 individual specimens in the wild, according to the U.S. Botanic Garden. Numerous botanical gardens and ...
Something rotten is preparing to bloom in the Bronx: one of the world's largest flowers that smells like death. The corpse flower at the New York Botanical Garden, with two other examples of ...
KIND AND HOW TO STEP IN TO HELP. SACRAMENTO STATE IS HOSTING A RARE FLOWER WITH A PUNGENT AROMA. THIS CORPSE FLOWER IS IN FULL BLOOM RIGHT NOW AT THE UNIVERSITY’S CAMPUS, AND IT GETS ITS NAME FROM THE ...
Full of funk, and now fully in bloom, a rare double-stemmed “corpse flower” is stinking up Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic this week. The plant, (scientific name “Amorphophallus ...
Thousands of visitors are clamoring to catch a glimpse—or a nausea-inducing whiff—of a corpse flower at the US Botanic Garden in Washington, DC, during its rare and fleeting bloom on Tuesday and ...
A corpse flower named Cosmo at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado — a large Amorphophallus titanum in College of Agricultural Sciences’ Conservatory since 2016 — is poised to bloom ...