The Venus Flytrap is found in nitrogen and phosphorus-poor environments, such as bogs and wet savannahs. It survives in wet sandy and peaty soils. Although it has been successfully transplanted and grown in many places around the world, it is found natively only in North and South Carolina in the United States, North Carolina, Northern Florida, New Jersey and Pine Barrens.
The Venus flytrap is a plant with eyes that can be found in the wild.
The Venus Flytrap is a seed plant.
The Venus Flytrap are plants due to how their cells are made up. The Venus Flytrap contains plant cells and does not go through respiration like an animal does.
The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous flytrap.
Venus Flytrap.
No, the Venus Flytrap has the texture of any other house plant, and is not slimy.
Carniverous plant
No. It is a plant.
The Venus Flytrap is a vascular plant because it has tubes to carry water and materials to parts of its body.
Muscles are tissue found in animal organisms. The venus flytrap is a plant, it does not have muscles.
The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous plant and not an animal.
Yes. The "trap" is a flower, and therefore the plant is an angiosperm.