Well seeing it is a plant it has plant cells not animal cells
Yes. They are from the kingdoms, plantea, domain, and eukaryota. Only bacteria are considered prokaryotic cells.
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.
Venus Flytraps do not fly.
Venus Flytraps should not be fed sausages. Feeding the plant meat will kill the plant. Insects should be it's only food.
Venus Flytraps make sugar to attract the insects that land on them. This triggers the plant to close, trapping the insect and allow the plant to digest the protein.
Venus Flytraps do not have a bulb
No, but they do make oxygen as a product of photosynthesis. Venus Flytraps work like any plant, except that they can acquire extra nutrients from bugs.
Yes, but not with salt. Salt can kill the plant.
A Venus Flytrap, or Dionaea muscipula, is a carnivorous plant of the droseraceae family. It is in both the Dicotyledones and Monocotyledones classes. The plant is
Yes, the Venus flytrap plant contains lysosomes. Lysosomes are membrane-bound organelles found in plant and animal cells involved in intracellular digestion and waste removal. In Venus flytraps, lysosomes help break down and digest prey that has been trapped by the plant's carnivorous leaves.
Yes. The "trap" is a flower, and therefore the plant is an angiosperm.
There is one stamen directly in the middle of a flower on the Venus Flytrap. This plant is carnivorous.