It would only soak up the water through its roots.
Poland Spring Water could kill a Venus Flytrap. Bottle water had too many minerals for the plant. Only distilled, deionized, reverse osmosis, or rain water should be used.
The Venus Flytrap is a vascular plant because it has tubes to carry water and materials to parts of its body.
Certainly not. Every living organism feeds on different things. For instance, feeding the Venus Flytrap cheese, could kill the plant. You should let your Flytrap feed naturally or give it bits of a hamburger. You should give it water when its soil gets dry.
yes, with any plant you can over water and KILL it
There's not much you can do. Just make sure you feed it distilled water from then on.
You feed it a couple of bugs per month and water it a little to keep its soil moist.
You can germinate the seed of a Venus Flytrap by placing it on a wet paper towel. Place the towel and seed in a cool and dark place, and keep it moist until it begins to germinate.
Ionized water. I used to have a bunch of carnivorous plants and I had to buy jugs of distilled water to feed them. DO NOT feed them tap water! It can kill them.
The trigger hairs in the Venus Flytrap help it catch food. A Venus Flytrap's mouth has the triggers hairs on its base so when the fly lands on it and touches a couple of the triggers hairs, it triggers the mouth to close. This is an important and valuable adaptation for the plant in order to survive.
Water, Sunlight, and Fertilizer. There's really nothing to it. (unless its a venus flytrap then the food would be flies and bugs)
The Venus Flytrap's habitat is few in nutrients and Nitrogen. These necessities for any plant to survive are scarce in its environment, hence the Flytrap gains its much needed nutrients from other sources - bugs. The Venus Flytrap digests bugs using special enzymes and uses the bug's nutrients to develop and adapt.
Venus Flytraps should constantly be in poor, moist soil. I use New Zealand Long Fibered Sphagnum Moss, as it can hold 20 times its weight in water (It's like a big sponge!) Distilled water, with no additives, or carefully purified water from home is good. Collecting rainwater isn't a bad idea, either.