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The soils where the flytrap grows is deficient in minerals such as phosphorus, without which the plants could not grow well. Some plants grew better that could absorb the minerals from dead insects, and the flytraps were the ones with the mutation (leaf traps) that best succeeded.

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11y ago
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12y ago

Flesh Eaters

You're reading the table of contents of your new science book and there it is in black and white: carnivorous plants. Thoughts race through your mind, "Seriously, carnivorous plants? Carnivorous means flesh-eating, right? Plants that eat flesh? Do they eat human flesh? Could one eat my dog? This cant' be for real, can it?"

Yes, it can.

Carnivorous plants have existed on this planet for thousands of years. In fact, today there are more than 500 different kinds of these plants. Their appetites range from insects and Spiders to small, one- or two-cell aquatic life forms. To be considered carnivorous, a plant must attract, capture, kill and digest insects or other animal life.

One carnivorous plant in particular has captured the public's imagination: The Venus Flytrap (Dionaea muscipula). Although the Venus Flytrap has fascinated people across the world, the plants actually grow in an incredibly small geographic area. In the wild, they are found in a 700-mile region along the coast of North and South Carolina. Within this area, the plants grow in humid, wet and sunny bogs and wetland areas.

OK, don't get carried away thinking you'll avoid any outdoor activity while visiting the Carolinas because you or your dog could be on the menu. Here are some of the Venus Fly trap's mealtime favorites: spiders, flies, caterpillars, crickets and slugs. See, humans and canines are not on the list. Now we know what they eat, but let's see why they eat it.

Most plants thrive on gases in the air plus water from the soil. During a process called photosynthesis, plants use the energy of the sun to convert carbon dioxide and water to sugar and oxygen. The sugar produced is then converted to energy. In addition to using sugar to get energy, plants need to make amino acids, vitamins and other stuff to survive. To accomplish this, plants require additional nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, magnesium, sulfur, calcium and potassium. These additional nutrients are usually found in the surrounding soil.

While Venus Flytraps do get some of their energy like other plants do, through the process of photosynthesis, they aren't able to get the additional nutrients they need from their surroundings. In the bogs where Venus Flytraps live, the soil is acidic, and minerals and other nutrients are scarce. Most plants can't survive in this environment. But the Venus Flytrap has developed the ability to thrive in this unique ecological niche. It has an another way of getting key nutrients like nitrogen. It eats living creatures. Living creatures like insects provide a good source of the nutrients missing from the soil.

We now know the "what" and "why" - but how do they do it? Come on, plants don't have eyes, hands, legs or even stomachs for that matter. They can't walk over to the local "Buzzer Queen" and order a caterpillar and fly sandwich with a side of spider legs. So how do they capture and digest their prey? It all centers on a specialized set of leaves that act as both mouth and stomach in one.

First, the Venus Flytrap's leaves form a trap. The leaves secrete a sweet nectar that attracts insects searching for food. When an insect lands or crawls on the trap, it is likely to run into one of six, short, stiff hairs on the trap's surface. These are called trigger hairs, and they serve as a primitive motion detector for the plant. If two of these hairs are brushed in close succession, or one hair is touched twice, the leaves close down upon the unsuspecting insect within half a second. The insect caught inside the partially closed trap will continue to thrash about, trying to escape. At least one (if not all) of the trigger hairs will be tweaked by the insect's movement. This serves as the signal to close the trap entirely.

Inanimate objects like twigs and leaves that fall into the trap, or objects that are placed there - like a pencil (you know you'd try it, too), will not move around and fire the trigger hairs. So the trap stays in its partially shut state until tension can be re-established in the leaves of the trap. This process takes about 12 hours, at which point the leaves spread apart again. The unwanted object either falls out as the leaves re-open or it's blown out by the wind.

Let's say the Venus Flytrap has trapped a small, juicy caterpillar. It has struggled enough so that the trap is now fully closed. What happens next? The edges of the Venus Flytrap's leaves have finger-like cilia that lace together when the leaves press shut. These long, hair-like projections make the plant look like it has spiny teeth; but the cilia are really only used to latch the trap shut. Once shut, the leaves form an airtight seal. This keeps digestive fluids and insect parts inside the trap and bacteria and molds outside the trap. It's good to keep bacteria and mold out because if allowed to grow within the trap, not only will it decompose the rotting insect inside, it will also attack the plant.

Insect, check. Trap sealed, check. Now it's time for the leaves to change from trap to stomach. Just like our stomach, the trap secretes acidic digestive juices. The insect is bathed in these juices over a period of five to 12 days, during which the insect is digested and nutrients are extracted. The time it takes depends on the size of the insect, the age of the trap and the surrounding temperature. The larger the insect is, the longer it takes to break down. Because digestive fluid is recycled after each digestion, an older trap may secrete a somewhat weaker mix of acid and enzymes. The ambient temperature can affect the rate of decomposition. For example, increasing temperature can speed up the process.

Once the nutrients are depleted from the acidic bath, the plant reabsorbs the digestive fluid. This serves as a signal to reopen the trap. The remains of the insect -- anything that couldn't be digested, like the exoskeleton -- are usually either washed away in the rain or blown away by the wind.

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12y ago

Special enzymes burn and digest the insect over a period of around 10 days.

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9y ago

Venus flytraps live almost solely in nitrogen-poor soil. As such, they have to get their nitrogen from sources like insects, and the occasional small amphibian or reptile.

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11y ago

Venus flytraps grow in soils that are nutrient poor and catch insects to provide extra nutrients.

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9y ago

Most green plants get nutrients from the soil.

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Q: The venus flytrap obtains what important raw material by digesting insects?
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Related questions

What preys on the Venus flytrap?

Only insects.


What is the difference between a Venus Flytrap and an animal that traps insects?

The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous plant and not an animal.


What are the spines of a Venus-flytrap for?

for eating insects and it gets its food from oxygen (other insects )


What does the Venus Flytrap get from the insects it 'eats'?

It gets nutrients for it to survive.


Does a Venus flytrap make its food?

No, it doesn't. It eats insects .


Does Venus flytrap make its own food?

No, it doesn't. It eats insects .


Why does the Venus Flytrap feed on insects?

The Venus Flytrap eats insects because of its native habitat, a bog (a type of wet, moist soil). The boggy soil is poor in nutrients so the plant gets its nutrients from insects. The plant is reliant on insects in order for it to live a healthy life.


What does a Venus Flytrap have that lures insects to them?

A Venus Flytrap needs insects in order to survive like any other plant. As they typically grow in a boggy environment with few nutrients, insects are the best way for the Venus Flytrap to survive and feed on.


Is the Venus Flytrap a predator?

Yes it would because it eats insects and flies.


Can a Venus flytrap walk?

No. Its leaves pivot back and forth to trap insects.


What does Vanus Flytrap plant eat?

Flies mostly & other flying insects.


How long can a Venus Flytrap go without food?

Because of it's poor, boggy environment, the Flytrap totally relies on insects and flies to gain important nutrients to survive. It would most probably last less than a month without food.