North American pitcher plants of the genus Sarracenia. .... range in diameter from 2 millimeters (the sizeof a pinhead) to about 4 millimeters (the size of a BB).
A pitcher is agallon size.
Pitcher plants are vascular plants.
Pitcher plants are called pitcher plants because they have 'pitchers' at the ends of their stems. The pitcher has digestive fluid in it with a sweet smell that attracts insects. The insects fly/crawl in and get trapped inside when the pitcher plant closes. They are then digested in the fluids in the "pitcher". Pitcher as in a jug or cup, not as in baseball pitcher but I think you knew that.
A pitcher is agallon size.
Pitcher-Plants of Borneo was created in 1996.
Pitcher-Plants of Borneo has 171 pages.
no animals do not help reproduce pitcher plants
Pitcher Plants of the Old World was created in 2009-05.
Pitcher Plants of the Old World has 1399 pages.
Pitcher plants eat insects because these plants need more nitrogen for survive and this requirement can not be completed by soil.
The types of carnivorous plants are Nepenthes (tropical pitcher plants), Sarracenia (pitcher plants), Dionaea (venus fly traps), Pinguicula (butterworts), Utricularia (bladderworts), Aldrovanda (waterwheel plants), Drosera (sundews), Cephalotus (australian pitcher plants), Heliamphora (sun pitcher plants) and Genlisea (corkscrew plants). Roridula is carnivorous at one point in it's life, mostly before flowering.
no
food