No, detrivores eat detritus; rotting material. Insectivores eat living animals, insects.
Yes
insectivorous/ carnivorous
in insectivorous plants they capture the icnsects and then suck their protein.
what is the correlation between nutrition in insectivorous plants and their habitat
It's a carnivorous, or rather insectivorous plant.
These are also known as Carnivorous (Meat-eating) plants. Several types are native to the U.S. Includilng the famous Venus Flytrap. They indeed eat insects and possibly could trap very small vermin-like mammals.
insectivorous/ carnivorous
Insectivores: Anteater Insectivorous Aardvark Insectivorous Mole Insectivorous Hedgehog Insectivorous Shrew Insectivorous Desman Insectivorous Tenrec Insectivorous Herbivores: Zebra Herbivorous Giraffe Herbivorous Green iguana Herbivorous Green sea turtle Herbivorous Manatee sea cow Herbivorous Dugong sea cow Herbivorous Fruit bat Herbivorous Carnivores: Lion Carnivorous Crocodile Carnivorous Barn owl Carnivorous Tiger Carnivorous Raccoon Carnivorous Eagle owl Carnivorous Eurasian big owl Carnivorous
mistletoe
There are over 500 plants that are considered to be carnivorous. This includes plants like Venus fly traps, sundews, and waterwheel plants.
There is only one difference between carnivorous and insectivorous, that is that insectivorous organisms eat onlyinsects whereas carnivorous can eat both, animals and insects. This is the only difference as you cannot say that only plantsare insectivorous, as there are may animals as well that eat only insects, Eg: anteater and almost all birds.
Flies and small insects Carnivorous plants and small carnivorous animals
in insectivorous plants they capture the icnsects and then suck their protein.
what is the correlation between nutrition in insectivorous plants and their habitat
Insectivorous Plants - book - was created on 1875-07-02.
A carnivorous plant is the type of plant that eats bugs. Plants such as butterworts and sundews, corkscrews, flytraps and waterwheels and pitcher plants trap bugs in order to meet nutrient needs that are lacking in the poor soils where they generally grow. The first widely-circulated research on the subject of carnivorous plants was Insectivorous Plants by English naturalist Charles Robert Darwin (Feb. 12, 1809-April 19, 1882).
It's a carnivorous, or rather insectivorous plant.
No, carnivorous plants do not have blood.