Yes, they are native to North Carolina.
Venus Flytraps are native to North Carolina, but they can be grown nearly anywhere. People in Oklahoma can get Venus Flytraps via the internet, or by finding a local who is already growing them.
Venus Flytraps are native to Carolina.USA.
No, Venus Flytraps do not have tastebuds.
No, Venus flytraps do not live in the Amazon. The carnivorous plants in question (Dionaea muscipula) instead have as their native distributional range subtropical wetlands in the more northerly southeastern United States of America.
Yes, with other Venus Flytraps. A Venus Flytrap produces flowers which, when pollinated, produce seeds.
Both Venus flytraps and the planet Venus are named after the Roman goddess of love.
Yes, Bunnings does sell Venus Flytraps.
No. Venus Flytraps are plants and don't have any bones.
Venus Flytraps belong to the Plantae kingdom.
Yes, although they are only grown as indoor plants; they are not native to Australia.
Venus Flytraps are important to life because they shallow deadly insects and keeps bugs away from us. Without the Venus Flytraps, thousands and thousands of deadly insects, such as mosquitoes which bring us malaria and locusts, bees etc would live to exist beside us on Earth. More importantly, Venus Flytraps are part of the Ecosystem and help deduce CO2 through respiration. They're just normal plants at the end of the day.
No. There is no life on Venus.