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The venus flytrap, the plant, is a living thing.Venus, the planet, is not.
Venus has, as determined by satellite probes, a surface temperature of 800 degrees , much too hot to sustain life as we know it.
Response to stimuli.
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.
Venus Flytraps are important to life because they shallow deadly insects and keeps bugs away from us. Without the Venus Flytraps, thousands and thousands of deadly insects, such as mosquitoes which bring us malaria and locusts, bees etc would live to exist beside us on Earth. More importantly, Venus Flytraps are part of the Ecosystem and help deduce CO2 through respiration. They're just normal plants at the end of the day.
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.
Yes, the venus flytrap is a carnivore because it consumes any insect it can trap, and those insects provide nourishment for the plant with by way of their meat content. Because it only consumes insects and other tiny bugs some people think that the venus flytrap is a more specialised type of carnivore called an insectivore.
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.
General scientific consensus says that "No" there is no life on Venus. This can be debated however on what 'life' is, and our ability to detect it (in those other proposed forms).
Probably not. Venus has toxic gases that disable any possible life, but there might be some life on Venus that has adapted to the harsh gases and mild temperatures.Cacti and other organisms have adapted to the desert, so why can't there be a possible chance on Venus? We really have no knowledge of life on Venus exept for the basics. If there is life on Venus, we would probably never be aware.
There is no life on Venus.
there is no life in venus