News

Corpse flower numbers are decreasing worldwide. Discover why conservation efforts struggle to maintain a healthy population.
Incomplete data results in reduced genetic diversity and contributes to population decline. Commonly known as the “corpse ...
The Amorphophallus gigas, a cousin to the infamous “corpse flower,” is beginning to bloom at the Aquatic House in the Brooklyn Botanical Garden. “I think this is an equally impressive ...
Plant biologists examined records for nearly 1,200 individual corpse flower plants from 111 institutions around the world.
Inside the hot, humid greenhouse at Summit Sprouts, Sarah Dormer leaned in close to the blooming amorphophallus konjac, took ...
Commonly called the "corpse flower," Amorphophallus titanum is endangered for many reasons, including habitat destruction, ...
Newly published research suggests that despite all the pampering corpse flower plants receive from their curators, ...
You don't often find crowds of people flocking together to take in the pungent scent of rotting flesh, but that's exactly what happens every time a corpse flower blooms at a public garden. In fact, ...
The corpse flower usually blooms once every four years in Indonesia, but this time it is unusual because it only bloomed last year.
The Thomas T. Taber Museum of the Lycoming County Historical Society is playing host to a most unusual visitor — an exotic ...
THE subfamily Lasioidese includes Amorphophallus, Rhektophyllum ... most primitive on account of its perigoniate hermaphrodite flower, the presence of endosperm in the seed and its pantropic ...