The fly dies because of the acids the venus fly trap has,then after a while the venus fly trap opens and the fly falls out if you put a stone or a peice of paper in to the fly trap,after 12 hours it opens and the paper or thing that went in will fall out
The answer is yes. AVenus fly trap can digest. Though it does not use the same procedure as you and I. Humans and Animals have a digestive tract that breaks down the food and converts it to a usable energy source. But a Venus fly trap does not have these organs. Instead, when it traps an insect or other bug, digestive fluids are sent into the "mouth" of the plant. These fluids then break down the body of the prey, removing and separating all usable materials. Next, the usable materials are stored for use as an energy source.
A venus fly trap catches attention from an insect with a good smell, when an fly lands on one of the leafs, it touches little hairs on surface of the leaf and the trap closes. Then the juice released by the plant dissolves the fly. When the fly is dissolved the trap opens again. Waiting for the next victim
There is some kind of bile/acid like liquid inside a Venus flytrap. They slowly cover the fly in the acid, and the fly begins to disintegrate. When it gets really mushy and liquid like, the Venus fly trapust kind of lets it flow down its throat.
When an insect brushes two of the trigger hairs on the venus flytrap, the two parts of the trap snap shut and seal the victim inside. Then the plant baths it in digestive juices and extracts the nutrients it needs from the victim's body.
A venus flytrap is able to live in soil that is low in nitrogen because it has perfected this way of gaining nitrogen from these unlucky visitors.
The Venus Flytrap has trigger hairs on both sides of its mouth. If a fly touches one of the trigger hairs it will set off a 20 second timer. If the fly touches another trigger hair while the 20 second timer is on the mouth will close!
Carnivorous plants digest bugs, but not for energy. Most of the plants live in acidic bogs, and get very little minerals. Therefore, the capture and digest bugs, giving them the minerals they need. If a Venus Flytrap eats a poisonous bug, it cannot be harmed. Some bugs, like catterpillars, can eat eat their way through the plant's trap, though, so be careful what you feed to your flytrap.
it does not swallow the bug it just takes the bugs liquids ang lets the body go after 12 hours
its mouth has sharp teeth and it doesn't basically eat the insect it kill the fly and eats part by part
Venus fly trap is an insectivorous plant. It gets food by trapping and digesting the insects.
Plants that eat insects are known as carnivorous plants. The Venus Fly Trap is one type and the Sarracenia is another.
Any Herbivore larger than it.
Generally not with the standard small Venus Fly traps.
Venus fly trap, butterwort, and pitcher plants eat insects.
The out side is green with a light red spots the inside is a bright red
the venus fly trap would be one of them
fly, venus fly trap
Because thats how they get there food and eat it. First the bug goes into its mouth then it traps it so the bug does not get away and then th bug dies and the venus fly trap eats it.
This means it eats insects, such as a venus fly-trap
frog
A Venus fly trap is considered heterotrophic because it gets food from the flys it eats
A Venus fly trap is considered heterotrophic because it gets food from the flys it eats
Any Herbivore larger than it.
Plants that eat insects are known as carnivorous plants. The Venus Fly Trap is one type and the Sarracenia is another.
It takes a few days (2) for a Venus Fly Trap to digest its food.
yes because if it is a venus fly trap and it eats flys, flays are counted as protein, meat=protein yes because if it is a venus fly trap and it eats flys, flays are counted as protein, meat=protein yes because if it is a venus fly trap and it eats flys, flays are counted as protein, meat=protein
They eat flies and fly meat Edited answer: Venus fly trap as the name suggests, is an insectivorous plant. It reduces the population of insects like mosqutoes that are harmful to us.