The Venus Flytrap's Lethal Allure
Native only to the Carolinas, the carnivorous plant that draws unwitting insects to its spiky maw now faces dangers of its own
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Lynda Richardson
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Perhaps the greatest threat is wildfire, or rather the lack thereof. Flytraps, which need constant access to bright sunlight because of their inefficient leaves, rely on fires to burn away the impenetrable underbrush every few years. (Their rhizomes survive and later the flytraps grow back.) But the Myrtle Beach area is now too densely populated for small fires to be allowed to spread naturally, and people complain about the smoke from prescribed burns. So the underbrush thickens until the flytraps are smothered. Moreover, with tinder collecting for years, there’s an increased danger of a fierce, uncontrollable blaze like the one that ravaged the region in the spring of 2009, destroying some 70 homes. Such conflagrations are so hot they can ignite the ground. “Nothing,” Luken says, “can survive that.”
Aficionados have cultivated flytraps almost since their discovery. Thomas Jefferson collected them (during his stay in Paris in 1786, he requested a shipment of the seeds of “the Sensitive Plant,” perhaps to wow Parisians). A few decades later, Napoleon Bonaparte’s wife, the green-thumbed Empress Josephine, grew flytraps in the gardens of the Château de Malmaison, her manor house. Over the years breeders have developed all sorts of designer varieties with jumbo traps, extra-red lips and names like Sawtooth, Big Mouth and Red Piranha. Under the right conditions, flytraps—which usually retail for about $5 apiece—are easy to raise and can be reproduced through tissue culture or planting seeds.
One afternoon Luken and I drove to Supply, North Carolina, to visit the Fly-Trap Farm, a commercial greenhouse specializing in carnivorous plants. The office manager, whose name was Audrey (of all things) Sigmon, explained they had some 10,000 flytraps on hand. There’s a constant demand, she said, from garden clubs, graduating high-school seniors who’d rather receive flytraps than roses, and drama departments performing the musical version of Little Shop of Horrors for the millionth time.
Some of the nursery’s plants come from local harvesters who legally gather the plants, says Cindy Evans, another manager. But these days most of their flytraps come to North Carolina by way of the Netherlands and South America, where they are cultured and grown.
Imported houseplants won’t save the species in the wild. “You can’t rely on somebody’s greenhouse—those plants don’t have an evolutionary future,” says Don Waller, a University of Wisconsin botanist who has studied the plant’s ecology. “Once any plant is brought into cultivation, you have a system where artificial selection is replacing natural selection.”
As far as Luken can tell, wild flytraps are finding a few footholds in a tamer world. They thrive on the edge of some established ditches, a man-made niche that nonetheless mimics the wet-to-dry soil transition of natural bogs. The plants also prosper in power-line corridors, which are frequently mowed, mimicking the effects of fire. Luken, who has developed something like a sixth sense for their preferred habitat, has experimented with scattering their tiny black seeds in flytrappy spots, like the Johnny Appleseed of carnivorous plants. He’s even planted a couple near the entrance of his own subdivision, where they seem to be flourishing.
Staff writer Abigail Tucker has covered lions, narwhals and gelada monkeys. Lynda Richardson has photographed Smithsonian stories about Jamestown, Cuba and desert tortoises.
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Related topics: Plants Conservation Botany Environmental Preservation North Carolina South Carolina
Additional Sources
“How the Venus flytrap snaps,” Yoël Forterre et al., Nature, January 27, 2005.
“Habitats of Dionaea muscipula (Venus’ Fly Trap), Droseraceae, Associated with Carolina Bays,” James O. Luken, Southeastern Naturalist, 2005.
“Prey capture in the Venus flytrap: collection or selection?” John J. Hutchens and James O. Luken, Botany, October 1, 2009.









Comments (13)
not enough information maybe a little more info will do the trick.
Posted by azalea on October 15,2012 | 09:33 PM
wow! so lame!
Posted by sam on April 28,2012 | 04:36 PM
I grew up a few miles from Wilmington, North Carolina, the heart of Venus Fly-Trap country. My mother was a self-educated expert on wild plants and occasionally gave lectures on Venus Fly-Traps to Ladies' Clubs in Eastern North Carolina. We had transplanted Venus Fly-Traps from the wild to our backyard and she would dig up a plant and pot it to illustrate her lectures. This was in the early 1920's, when I was in grammar school; plants were not protected and were abundant. I'm afraid that I myself helped her dig up at least a hundred plants to transplant or to give to friends. When transplanted out of their native bog they usually did not live more than a year or two.
Posted by Morris Cox on April 20,2010 | 10:21 AM
Only the Carolinas? perhaps that's a particular strain of venus flytrap?
In woods west of Pensacola Florida, there were dense fields of flytrap, choking out most other plants. I haven't been there since 1980, perhaps they're buried under houses now. I remember walking through these areas (your feet were in water), the atmosphere felt very odd, menacing. They were mostly full to the top with ex-bugs, to use in a bouquet, you had to arduously clean the insides.
Posted by Mary on April 13,2010 | 10:58 AM
what page numbers did this article appear on in the Smithsonian magazine??
Posted by Molly on March 4,2010 | 12:37 AM
Ms. Tucker has expertly captured the quintessence of the vanishing Venus'Flytrap in its lair in the Carolinas, as studied by the dedicated ecologist-conservationist James Luken. Readers who are concerned with the sad fate of this unique carnivorous plant might wish to join proposed efforts to save the Venus' Flytrap through a voluntary premium placed on the sale of ethical and legal plants and thereby generating badly needed funds for its habitat management and protection (see http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/flytrap.
Posted by Thomas C. Gibson on March 2,2010 | 11:24 AM
Fantastic article.
Posted by CatfishSC on March 2,2010 | 03:16 AM
COOOOOOOOOL!!!!
Posted by paul on February 28,2010 | 01:50 PM
Sweet article!
Posted by sarah springer on February 23,2010 | 10:26 AM
Abigail Tucker is one of the best magazine writers in the business. The Smithsonian is lucky to have her. Keep up the amazing work!
Posted by Joseph on January 26,2010 | 01:36 PM
Wonderful article! You all might be interested to know that there is at least one more genus of active trappers - Utricularia have small bladder traps with a vacuum-sealed front door. Prey touch tiny trigger hairs that release the door, which opens inward, sucking in the prey to their doom. In the Southeastern US, most of these are floating aquatics - one species, Utricularia inflata, floats to the surface every spring to bloom, decorating our ponds like golden stars across the sky. So lovely.
Posted by Jean Everett on January 26,2010 | 05:55 AM
INTERESTING !!
Posted by ESTEBAN AGOSTO REID on January 23,2010 | 06:11 AM
Very well written and extremely informative. I had no idea of where the Venus Flytrap came from. I've known about them since I was probably 8 yr. old some 54 yr. ago. For some unknown reason I always thought of them coming up to the stores from the Amazon Rain Forrest or a jungle in Africa. That was probably from watching Tarzan movies and TV shows.
It's sad this topic isn't taught in grammar school. That's when children are most curious about these kinds of oddities of nature and impressionable. They would then take the information home to parents, who probably aren't aware of it either.
The information has got to get out to the public through articles like this, but in the mainstream news, not a publication most people cannot afford and some cannot understand.
Stronger protection of their natural habitat needs to be a priority. Addresses of Congressmen on Conservationist Committees need to accompany articles like these, as well as, the responsible people in the Carolinas.
Thanks for the education.
Posted by Charles Smyth on January 21,2010 | 07:00 PM