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Today’s Social Rundown features the stinky Corpse Flower, how a biotech company tries to bring back the Moa Bird, and the ...
KRON4's Darya Folsom reports <a href=" ...
Amorphophallus titanum. That's probably not something in your everyday vocabulary, but if you say corpse flower to a San ...
Dozens of people turned out to witness the rare unfurling of a tropical plant that emits a powerful stench at a botanical ...
Another corpse flower is stinking up Como Park Conservatory This sibling’s bloom could be even bigger than last year’s.
NORTHAMPTON — The Smith College Botanic Garden is celebrating a rare and short-lived event: its corpse flower is blooming — but only for the weekend, most likely.
Frederick, the “sibling” of last year’s corpse flower sensation at the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory at Como Park in St. Paul, is expected to bloom imminently (perhaps this weekend).
The corpse flower at Smith College's botanical garden is set to bloom, attracting visitors and pollinators alike.
Phil – one of Cal State Long Beach’s rare corpse flowers – is getting ready to bloom, even as early as Saturday, said the university’s botanical curator.
A stinky-smelling flower is expected to bloom at The Botanic Garden of Smith College in Massachusetts early next week.
It’s called the corpse flower, and it’s drawing in some attention at a local botanic garden.