Lady Macdeath, we hardly knew ye. Norfolk Botanical Garden’s corpse flower is at the end of its blooming reign, and isn’t ...
Throngs of people flocked to the Norfolk Botanical Garden Sunday, some spending hours in line in the hopes of getting a ...
"Lady MacDeath," a rare corpse flower, captivated crowds at Norfolk Botanical Garden with its brief yet pungent bloom, causing visitors to line up for hours.
A smelly, enormous plant named Lady MacDeath will finish its bloom later today at Norfolk Botanical Garden. The garden’s ...
A rare corpse flower is blooming at Norfolk Botanical Garden. The massive flower may not bloom again for another 10 years.
A new study on titan arum -- commonly known as the corpse flower for its smell like rotting flesh -- uncovers fundamental genetic pathways and biological mechanisms that produce heat and odorous ...
Right now, people are lining up at the Geelong Botanic Gardens to see and smell the giant corpse flower, a rare plant that stinks like a dead body. This is the titan arum. It’s a plant that makes news ...
Commonly called the “corpse flower,” Amorphophallus titanum is endangered for many reasons, including habitat destruction, climate change and encroachment from invasive species. Now, plant biologists ...
The rare corpse flower at Norfolk Botanical Garden has bloomed for the first time in a decade, and the garden is extending ...
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