The powerful scent of rotting flesh is set to waft through the air at a Melbourne garden centre to the delight of hundreds of ...
A rare corpse flower, scientifically known as Amorphophallus titanum and affectionately nicknamed Putricia, unfurled at the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney after a seven-year wait since it arrived at ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Death knocks twice. In an extraordinary botanical double-act, a second corpse flower has started to bloom at the Royal Botanic ...
A second corpse flower has begun to bloom at Sydney's Botanic Gardens. The plant, Putricia's "sibling", will not be displayed to the public and will be kept in the nursery to better control ...
The corpse flower, also known by its scientific name ... Advertisement Article continues below this ad Another flowered briefly in the Sydney Royal Botanic Gardens in late January, attracting ...
Staff and visitors at Australia's Royal Botanic Garden Sydney are hoping to see ... also known as the "corpse flower." The flower's Latin scientific name translates as "giant, misshapen ...
The corpse flower blooms for the first time in its 15 years at Canberra's Australian National Botanic Gardens.
Many visitors queued up to admire the 1.6 metre high flower, which smelt like a corpse. The bloom, the first in 15 years at the Royal Sydney Botanic Garden, generated an incredible response ...
SYDNEY (AP) — The rare unfurling of an endangered ... Tall, pointed and smelly, the corpse flower is scientifically known as amorphophallus titanum — or bunga bangkai in Indonesia, where ...
Many visitors queued up to admire the 1.6 metre high flower, which smelt like a corpse. The bloom, the first in 15 years at the Royal Sydney Botanic Garden, generated an incredible response, with more ...