Depending on where you live is the case. Venus Flytraps live in tropical regions, so it will have to be pretty warm. And you'll need plenty of small insects, and you must water them a lot. If you have all those necessary procedures, the plant would make a great class pet.
Yes, the Venus Flytrap it is a good plant as it can eat all of the bad bugs trying to eat your plants in and around your house.
The Flytrap keeps the fly and mosquito population down in its surroundings.
Yes, Venus Flytraps are good at catching and eating insects.
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Looking through the books at your local library, searching the Internet, or clicking on the link below, are all good ways of researching information about the Venus Flytrap.
No, the Venus Flytrap is a predator that consumes small insects and spiders to make up for a lack of nutrients in their natural environment. Since they usually get their food secondhand, they aren't a good source of nutrients themselves and are usually not eaten by animals.
Bugs, but don't feed it ants. Lots of people feed it hamburger meat, but that is NOT a good idea.
Yes. As their habitat lacks good quality nutrients and the chemical, Nitrogen, it is mandatory that the Flytrap gets its energy from other sources - eating insects. Photosynthesis alone would not keep the Venus Flytrap alive.
In many ways, yes. They are easy to take care of with a fair need of sunlight and water. It can be a good outdoor plant because without insects, it dies.
A good way to describe Venus is like a sheep, it is fluffy but has a lot of panda predators
The Venus Flytrap, along with other carniverous plants, evolved in an environment devoid of nitrogen and phosphorous compounds which it would need to survive. It obtains these "foods" by digesting prey, whereas most plants obtain these foods from the soil via their root systems.Flytraps actually get a good deal of their sustenance like other plants do, through the process of photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants use the energy of the sun to drive a reaction that converts carbon dioxide and water to sugar and oxygen
Birds and possibly small rodents eat the Venus Flytrap.