they are just like Venus fly traps they are plant that live in swampy fresh water areas that have no roots they have small bristles inside there mouth that when they are brushed slam shut trapping the insect they then are sprayed with a sticking substance that makes it easier for digestion.
The bladderwort lives in water
in the water
Bladderwort are aquatic carnivorous plants that use specialized underwater bladder-like structures to trap their prey. When tiny animals such as water fleas come into contact with trigger hairs on the bladderwort's trap, the trap rapidly sucks in water, along with the prey, capturing and digesting it to obtain nutrients.
Bladderwort is not a second-level consumer; it is classified as a carnivorous plant belonging to the genus Utricularia. It primarily consumes small aquatic organisms, such as tiny insects and protozoans, using specialized bladder-like traps to capture them. In ecological terms, bladderwort acts more like a primary producer (as a plant) and a predator but does not fit the typical definition of a consumer in a food chain context.
i dont freakin know
Yes. The bladderwort traps minute insects and crustaceans in their specialized urn-shaped bladders.
No, the bladderwort is a plant - a producer.
what up this your girl keekee
living plant that eat people
A bladderwort is any of a number of aquatic carnivorous plants of the genus Utricularia, which have open bladders which trap insects and crustaceans.
a carnivorous vplant that loves to trap bugs
In freshwater ponds, lakes and streams.