Discover the world’s largest flowers, from giant Rafflesias to Titan arums, showcasing nature’s incredible scale and beauty.
Thousands lined up at UNC Charlotte’s greenhouse to witness Cadavera, a rare corpse flower, whose towering bloom reeked of rotting flesh.
We found that the female flowers do most of the work attracting pollinators, as previous studies noted. They emit vast ...
The corpse flower at UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens is blooming for the first time in several years, releasing a distinctive ...
Corpse flower blooms “are really hard to study,” says Delphine Farmer, an atmospheric chemist at Colorado State University ...
SEATTLE — Amazon's first-ever corpse flower, given the moniker "Morticia," has bloomed a second time. The Amorphophallus titanum, which lives in the Amazon Spheres, only blooms an average of every 5 ...
SEATTLE — It is one of the few horticultural experiences that could be more for your nose than your eyes, and it’s on display now at the Amazon Spheres in Seattle. Morticia, the corpse flower, is ...
The Norfolk Botanical Garden is getting a corpse flower. First announced a few weeks ago on social media, the enormous, flowering plant will be a part of the garden’s upcoming Garden of Tomorrow ...
(THE CONVERSATION) Sometimes, doing research stinks. Quite literally. Corpse plants are rare, and seeing one bloom is even rarer. They open once every seven to 10 years, and the blooms last just two ...
When a corpse flower bloomed on campus, atmospheric scientists got to work. What they discovered provides new evidence about the unique pollination strategies of a very unusual flower.