Hold your nose: Stinky corpse flower blooms in New Hampshire


              This photo provided by Dartmouth College shows titan arum — or corpse flower in Hanover, N.H. Named Morphy, the corpse flower began opening at Friday, Sept. 23, 2016 at Dartmouth College's Life Sciences Greenhouse. The 7 ½-foot flower is expected to be fully open on Saturday before it starts to collapse on Sunday. (Robert Gill/Dartmouth College via AP)
This photo provided by Dartmouth College shows titan arum — or corpse flower in Hanover, N.H. Named Morphy, the corpse flower began opening at Friday, Sept. 23, 2016 at Dartmouth College's Life Sciences Greenhouse. The 7 ½-foot flower is expected to be fully open on Saturday before it starts to collapse on Sunday. (Robert Gill/Dartmouth College via AP)

HANOVER, N.H. (AP) - A flower that got its nickname from its putrid smell is blooming at Dartmouth College for the first time since 2011.

Named Morphy, the titan arum - or corpse flower - began opening Friday afternoon at the Ivy League college's Life Sciences Greenhouse. The 7 ½-foot flower is set to collapse Sunday.

Morphy is native to Sumatra's equatorial rainforests and has a long pointy stalk with a skirt-like covering.

Dartmouth greenhouse manager Kim DeLong said its odor has been described as a cross between a decaying animal and urine.

DeLong said she plans to pollinate the endangered flower to share seeds and pollen around the world.

The greenhouse will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday.

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Link to the live webcam: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~grnhouse/morphy.html

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