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 ...
After the inflorescence began to develop in the UCSC Greenhouses, where this photo was taken, the plant was moved to the Arboretum to accommodate visitors. Jim Velzy, former director of the UCSC ...
If you’ve ever wanted to see – and smell – one of the weirdest wonders in the natural world, now’s your chance. The famous Corpse Flower, officially known as Amorphophallus titanum, is blooming right ...
Cosmo, Colorado State University’s stinky and rare corpse flower, bloomed for the first time Saturday night. Hundreds of people are lined up Sunday, completely circling the block on the CSU campus ...
After the corpse flower at the New York Botanical Garden bloomed for the first time in 1937 and 1939, New Yorkers had to wait 80 years to smell its stench once again. The most recent bloom occurred in ...
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