The mouth.
The triggers tell the plant to shut its trap.
its mouth has sharp teeth and it doesn't basically eat the insect it kill the fly and eats part by part
The stigma is the part of the plant that traps pollen grains.
The chloroplast organelle
No, but euglena is part animal (it can move around) and part plant (it can make its own food.) It is a single-celled organism.
The leaves that capture the insects. They don't really 'eat' the bug. Mostly they release a fluid that dissolves the insect. Somehow it sucks up the nutrients from the liquefied insect and when its done, it opens and the skeleton falls out.
I'm pretty sure it is chlorophyll.
If the insect is too big or too small it might escape the Venus Flytrap but for the most part yes. Even small frogs.
The chlorophyll found in chloroplasts utilises the sun's energy for photosynthesis.
It's part of the trap mechanism. The whole point of the trap - is to ensnare insects which the plant absorbs as food. If the traps were sprung every time something brushed one of the hair triggers, the traps would waste energy and time re-setting. The triggers only activate the trap if two of the three hairs in the trap are touched within 20 seconds of each other.
Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system. It's daytime temperature can easily reach 900 degrees Fahrenheit. This is because Venus is covered by thick clouds of carbon dioxide, which traps heat from the sun. Each part of Venus is as hot and inhospitable as any other part.
Chloroplasts are found in plants to capture light energy