The soils where the flytrap grows is deficient in minerals such as phosphorus, without which the plants could not grow well. Some plants grew better that could absorb the minerals from dead insects, and the flytraps were the ones with the mutation (leaf traps) that best succeeded.
Venus flytrap and pitcher plant are examples of autotrophic plants that also exhibit a heterotrophic mode of nutrition by capturing and digesting insects for additional nutrients in nutrient-poor environments.
Only insects.
The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous plant and not an animal.
for eating insects and it gets its food from oxygen (other insects )
It gets nutrients for it to survive.
No, it doesn't. It eats insects .
No, it is a type of flowering plant that is highly adapted to freshwater marshes with extremely neutrient poor soil and is pollinated by the very same kinds if insects it traps and eats. The traps themselves are modified leaves.
No, it doesn't. It eats insects .
The Venus Flytrap eats insects because of its native habitat, a bog (a type of wet, moist soil). The boggy soil is poor in nutrients so the plant gets its nutrients from insects. The plant is reliant on insects in order for it to live a healthy life.
A Venus Flytrap needs insects in order to survive like any other plant. As they typically grow in a boggy environment with few nutrients, insects are the best way for the Venus Flytrap to survive and feed on.
Yes it would because it eats insects and flies.
Flies mostly & other flying insects.