Ten Plants That Put Meat on Their Plates

In addition to the well-known Venus flytrap, many other plant species feed on bugs or crustaceans

  • By Sarah Zielinski
  • Smithsonian.com, January 08, 2010
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Albany pitcher plant

(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in England)


Albany pitcher plant

Though the Albany pitcher plant (Cephalotus follicularis) was first described in 1806, Charles Darwin missed this plant when the HMS Beagle stopped by southwestern Australia in 1839. The plant can be found in peaty swamps where it lures insects—mostly ants—with its nectar glands into a one- to two-inch tall pitcher filled with digestive fluid.

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Comments (9)

These r great pics.

Kieth, I believe active and passive refers to how the prey is caught. Sundews don't actively catch insects. The insect is caught by the mucilage, then the sundew digests it. Venus flytraps, Waterwheel plants, and Bladderworts are the only carnivorous plants that actively TRAP insects.

Also, The Bladderworts are aquatic, so even if it wasn't an active trap, its prey couldn't "fly in".

There are also Venus flytraps in the marshy bogs of the Blue Hill reservation in eastern Massachusetts, along with pitcher plants.

I was disappointed at the omission of Utricularia. However they do not actively trap; the trap while sophisticated is purely mechanical and works even when the plant cells are killed.

I suggest reading the wikipedia article (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utricularia#Trapping_mechanism) to be clear about the trapping mechanism. It is neither like a venus fly trap nor is it at all like a lobster trap. The plant does not activate it in response to stimuli as is the case with the venus fly trap or waterwheel. Rather, it uses suction to maintain a vacuum in its bladders which are sealed with sets of fine hair-like triggers. A small disruption in the trigger disrupts the seal, causing the water to rush into the bladder. Then the same suction action which created the vacuum also serves to keep the prey trapped there.

This is entirely different from a lobster trap which is just based on having a large opening for the entrance side which leads to a small opening on the inside. But it is also not like a venus fly trap or waterwheel where the plants actually move themselves in response to stimuli. I would probably describe the bladderwort's trap as "active" because of its dynamic nature (and to contrast it against plants which trap only via sticky substances, which it clearly does not do), but it isn't the same as the other two mentioned.

That said, I do still fault the original sentence because I would argue that some sundews should also count as active. Although they use a sticky substance to ensnare their prey, many also actively curl around their prey in order to maximize the contact and hence minimize the possibility of escape. Without this curling motion they are not as effective.

Actually the bladderwort is active in capturing its prey. The closed bladder when its trigger is stimulated by a small animal suddenly opens creating a suction which pulls in the animal and traps it. Digestion occurs and the bladderwort receives some nutrition. I found some in a lake on Mt. Desert Island in Maine once.

Bladderworts are more like lobster traps in which bugs fly in and then become trapped.

Is there a genus of actively trapping carnivorous plants called Utricularia spp. ? ( bladderwort ) This would seem to contradict the statement in the description of waterwheel that only two species do this .



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Venus flytrap Waterwheel Albany pitcher plant Yellow pitcher plant Nepenthes eymae Rainbow plant King sundew Mexican butterwort Stinking passion flower Petunia


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