Smelly, Rare 'Corpse Flower' Set to Bloom

A corpse flower in bloom in 2003 at the United States Botanic Garden. This was the second time the then 10-year-old plant had bloomed; the first was in 2001.
(Image credit: United States Botanic Garden)

A rare behemoth flower — dubbed the "corpse flower" for its rotting-meat smell — is set to bloom at Western Illinois University this week. It's one of a small group of these flowers that have bloomed in cultivation since the 1880s.

As of Monday, the mega flower (one of four in the university's greenhouse), was 44.5 inches (113 centimeters) tall, having grown nearly 4  inches (about 5.7 cm) in 24 hours.  In the wild, the plant can grow as big as 20 feet (6 meters) tall and 15 feet (4.5 meters) across.

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