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No, they are herbivores and they cannot digest insects or any other meats.what do they ingunna's eatt
In ordinary soil a sundew does not need any extra nitrates. In poor soil the plant can catch and digest its own supply of nutrient rich insects.
Venus Flytraps make sugar to attract the insects that land on them. This triggers the plant to close, trapping the insect and allow the plant to digest the protein.
an insect touches a leaf of a sundew plant then the leaf slowly moves and covers the insect with all those sticky stuff and then digest it and the nutrients go in the plant by tiny holes leading to the roots.
There are little hairs lining the inside, usually about 3. As an insect walks on the plant, it touches the hairs, and once they have all been touched, the plant knows to start closing up to get its food.
yes
pitcher plants can photosynthesis, any green part of a plant can photosynthesis. pitcherplants though cannot photosynthesis enough to survive and have adapted to digest small organosms instead.
Yes. It also eats Amphibians and sometimes small birds that fall into it (this only happens if the plant is big enough to digest it and the bird is small e.g. Hummingbird.
Insectivorous plants typically trap insects that land on them and digest them for nitrogen and phosphorous. The plant uses digestive juices to absorb the soft insides of the insect and discards the shell when finished.
Yes.
The Sundew will digest any insect that sticks to its sticky pads.
The cobra lily is a pitcher plant meaning it holds water to attract insects inside its "pitcher". Once an insect is inside, the steep, slippery sides will not allow it to get out easily. Once the prey is captured, the plant releases a digestive enzyme to digest the prey.