People lined up to see—and smell—the blossoms of two pungent plant species, which only bloom for a short time every few years ...
A rare plant known as the corpse flower bloomed in Sydney on Friday for the first time in more than a decade, emitting an ...
Sydney's corpse flower attracts thousands of people with its rare blossom and its stench of rotting flesh, offering a ...
Hand-pollination of the pungent corpse flower results in hundreds of seeds that will be sent across the world to help ...
An endangered tropical plant that emits the stench of a rotting corpse during its rare blooms has begun to flower in a ...
Popping up on my FYP, all three meters of her, was Putricia the Corpse Flower, the Botanic Gardens of Sydney’s Araceae It ...
Thousands have waited hours to catch a glimpse of the bloom of a corpse flower at Sydney's Botanic Gardens. The plant is ...
In the wild, the stench of a corpse flower is meant to attract thousands of flies to pollinate itself. Flies swarm to Putricia.Credit: At Botanic Gardens in Sydney, staff will extract pollen ...
Visitors to Sydney's Royal Botanic Garden photograph a blooming corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum) on January 24. Don Arnold / Getty Images “Something that occurs this rarely is always a ...
People have queued for hours at a Sydney greenhouse to get a whiff of the infamous corpse flower, as it bloomed for the first time in years. The sizeable flower, officially called the ...
A humidifier wafts mist below the focus of everyone’s attention: a long-awaited debut into Sydney society, the vomit-smelling, rotting-flesh imitating “corpse flower” is blooming.