Tumbi-Lata or Ghat-parni
An Australian pitcher plant is another name for a Western Australian pitcher plant - also known as the Albany pitcher plant, a carnivorous plant of Western Australia, Latin name Cephalotus follicularis.
Pitcher plants are called pitcher plants because they have 'pitchers' at the ends of their stems. The pitcher has digestive fluid in it with a sweet smell that attracts insects. The insects fly/crawl in and get trapped inside when the pitcher plant closes. They are then digested in the fluids in the "pitcher". Pitcher as in a jug or cup, not as in baseball pitcher but I think you knew that.
A pitcher plant is a round plant that contains water for insects to fall into and drown, and after they drown, their bodies sink to the bottom of the plant and they are absorbed into the plant for their nutrients. Pitcher plants live in soil that does not have many minerals in the ground and they have to get what they need from drowned insects. They are called pitcher plants, because, they contain water and look like pitchers, (or jars, containers), which also hold water. They do not have anything to do with Baseball pitching, if that is what you mean by your question.
Pitcher plant is insectivorous.
Anthophyta
Yes the pitcher plant is a flowering plant. It flowers in spring.
The entire "pitcher" of the Pitcher plant contains chlorophyll is green and can photosynthesise
The purple pitcher plant is a beautiful and unique plant. Queen Victoria chose this plant to put on the Newfoundland penny. In 1954, it was chosen as the floral emblem of Newfoundland and Labrador. Charles Darwin called it "the most wonderful in the world''.
The pitcher plant catches bugs and flies and eats them
The pitcher plant belongs to the Sarracenia Family. :)
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