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  2. What's rare, reeks like dirty feet and rotting garbage − and ...

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    This plant, known as a corpse flower, came to the Brooklyn garden in 2018 as a seedling from Malaysia and began blooming there for the first time on Friday.

  3. Titan arum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titan_arum

    Because its flower blooms infrequently and only for a short period, it gives off a powerful scent of rotting flesh to attract pollinators. As a consequence, it is characterized as a carrion flower, earning it the names corpse flower or corpse plant. The titan arum was first brought to flower in cultivation at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in ...

  4. It's big, rare and dead smelly: Visitors flock to see the ...

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    The fact that Putricia is the first corpse flower to bloom at the garden in 15 years has fueled her rapid rise to fame. Up to 20,000 admirers have filed past for a moment in her increasingly ...

  5. Carrion flower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrion_flower

    Apart from the scent, carrion flowers often display additional characteristics that contribute to the mimesis of a decaying corpse. These include their specific coloration (red, purple, brown), the presence of setae, and orifice-like flower architecture. Carrion flowers attract mostly scavenging flies and beetles as pollinators.

  6. Visitors line up to see and smell a corpse flower's stinking ...

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    It was the first bloom for the corpse flower named Mirage, which was donated to the California Academy of Sciences in 2017. It’s been housed in the museum’s rainforest exhibit since 2020.

  7. Rafflesia arnoldii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rafflesia_arnoldii

    The flower of Rafflesia arnoldii grows to a diameter of around one meter (3.3 feet), [2] weighing up to 11 kilograms (24 lb). [18] These flowers emerge from very large, cabbage-like, maroon or dark brown buds typically about 30 cm (12 in) wide, but the largest (and the largest flower bud ever recorded) found at Mount Sago , Sumatra in May 1956 ...

  8. Stinky bloom of 'corpse flower' enthrals thousands - AOL

    www.aol.com/thousands-await-stinky-plants-rare...

    But there have been other corpse flower blooms across Australia in recent years, including Melbourne and Adelaide's botanic gardens, each time attracting thousands of curious visitors keen on ...

  9. Rafflesiaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rafflesiaceae

    Rafflesiaceae flowers mimic rotting carcasses in scent, color, and texture to attract their pollinators, carrion flies. For this reason, some flowers of the family Rafflesia are nicknamed "corpse flowers". Most members of Rafflesiaceae possess a large, bowl-shaped floral chamber formed by a perianth tube and a diaphragm. This diaphragm is the ...