Cloaked by the shadows of enchanting Asian woodlands, strange growths can be seen peeking out from between leaf litter like the ghosts of long-dead flowers.
M. kirishimense's, blooming 40 days after the better known species.
This study of these life cycle interactions and between wildlife and physical forces on earth such as seasons, is called"Our multifaceted evidence leads us to conclude that this taxon is morphologically, phenologically, phylogenetically, and ecologically distinct, and should, therefore, be recognized as a separate species," Kobe University ecologist Kenji Suetsugu and colleagues
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