The stench of a rare corpse flower make us retch. But you’re not the target – the plant wants to lure carrion beetles and ...
Schaller and collaborators then identified what kicks off the corpse flower’s thermogenesis, as well as the specific chemical ...
Researchers have revealed the genetic and chemical reasons behind the titan arum’s unique warming mechanism and putrid scent.
When it blooms, this stinky flower releases chemicals that smell like rotting flesh to attact pollinators, such as carrion ...
It’s amorphophallus titanum, named after the putrid stench it releases when it blooms to attract pollinators like beetles and ...
The corpse flower is infamous for its rare blooms and its signature odor, which mimics the stench of rotting flesh.
A new study on titan arum -- commonly known as the corpse flower for its smell like rotting flesh -- uncovers fundamental genetic pathways and biological mechanisms that produce heat and odorous ...
This GIF shows a heatmap of the corpse flower when it blooms, with the central appendix heating up to about 20 degrees Fahrenheit above ambient temperature. Credit: Eric Schaller The plant can go ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Geelong’s corpse flower has now bloomed, revealing its putrid “dead possum” stench. The corpse plant, Amorphophallus titanum ...
The corpse flower's reddish-purple structure and stench ... The North American pawpaw, Asimina triloba and species from the African succulent genus Stapelia are carrion flowers.
Dartmouth scientists sniff out the genes — and identify a new chemical compound — that drive titus arum's pungent odor. The unusual odor of the titan arum, commonly called the corpse flower because ...