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.
No, Venus Flytraps do not have tastebuds.
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.
Venus Flytraps belong to the Plantae kingdom.
No. Venus Flytraps are plants and don't have any bones.
No, but they do make oxygen as a product of photosynthesis. Venus Flytraps work like any plant, except that they can acquire extra nutrients from bugs.
No. There is no life on Venus.
No. Venus Flytraps are carnivorous meaning they only eat meat.
Venus Flytraps merely digest the bug, not feel them.
The " mouth" of the Venus fly trap is covered in a very sticky sugar substance. Flies love sugar. When a fly lands on the sugar in the Venus fly traps' mouth, it gets stuck. Then the Venus fly trap closes it's mouth and digests the fly.
Venus Flytraps do not have an IQ.