The Sumatra rain forests of Indonesia are home to the world’s largest flower, the iconic “corpse flower” that measures three feet wide, weighs 15 pounds and reeks of rotting flesh.

The red flower above is that plant’s newly discovered tiny cousin. Thankfully, it smells like coconut.

Researchers from two universities in the Philippines reported the existence of Rafflesia consueloae — officially the smallest of the world’s “giant” flowers — Thursday in the journal PhytoKeys. At around 3.8 inches in diameter, it’s about the size of a softball.

They discovered it on a mountain site on Luzon Island in the Philippines through what Perry Ong, a biologist and an author of the study, described as a serendipitous event.