A venus fly trap is adapted to its environment by living in very hot conditions and it lives on flies and other small insects! It has very quick reactions which is how it catches its food so quickly!
it has large waxy leaves, to trap water and produce a poison so that it can open up to vibrant colours and attract flies and insects to get nutrients
The Venus flytrap, Dionaea muscipula, is a good example of a green plant that has made an unusual adaptation to obtain the nutrient that it needs to be able to grow. The leaves of Venus' Flytrap open wide and have short, stiff hairs called trigger or sensitive hairs. When anything touches these hairs enough to bend them, the two lobes of the leaves snap shut, trapping whatever is inside.
You may want to look this answer up in more detail in a book called the house plant expert. Or maybe even your local library!
The Venus Flytrap has tiny hairs on its inner surfaces. When an insect or arachnid touches one of those hairs, the trap will be triggered if a different hair is contacted within twenty seconds of the first, or if the same hair is touched twice in quick succession. (This is to eliminate the possibility of wasting energy for no nutritional gain.) The lobes of the trap with then shut in approximately 0.1 seconds. The stiff hairlike protrusions (or cilia) mesh together, preventing large prey from escaping. The holes in this mesh-work allow smaller prey to escape, most likely because the benefit that would be obtained from the prey would be less than the cost of digesting them. If said prey escapes, the trap with reopen within 12 hours; but if the prey moves around in the trap, it will tighten and digestion will begin much quicker.
Well they have little hairs in their "mouth" so they can eat meat(bugs). Therefore they can thrive in low protein soil.
The venus fly trap use it's mouth to catch and eat the flies around it.
In your moms but
From the side it looks kinda like an ax.
Plants that eat insects are known as carnivorous plants. The Venus Fly Trap is one type and the Sarracenia is another.
Generally not with the standard small Venus Fly traps.
Venus fly trap, butterwort, and pitcher plants eat insects.
Any Herbivore larger than it.
It has trigger hairs that snap the bugs.
Venus fly trap
Venus fly trap
Venus fly trap
Venus fly trap
cyrillecyrille
fly, venus fly trap
Yes
ehh example a fly. The fly is not benifiting of the relationship with the venus fly trap. because the fly is the host she is being eating by the venus fly trap.but the venus fly trap is benifiting.
The venus fly trap - Dionaea muscipula, is a carnivorous plant.
the venus fly trap would be one of them
what layer does the Venus fly trap live in
a venus fly trap