Yes, Venus fly traps can eat box elder bugs.
venus fly traps glow blue because of how much nutrients they have
yes,they use them for nutrients, sense they live in non-nutrient soil
Venus flytraps survive on bugs that fly into their traps, and therefore do help it to grow and reproduce. The important nutrients the bugs contain help the plant to maintain it's growth during times when food is scarce. As it's environment has few nutrients, bugs are a key in order for the plant to live a healthy life.
A Venus fly trap is a plant it has a jaw like flower which looks like a mouth so it tempts the insects to take its nectar. When the insect is inside the trap the Venus fly trap closes its jaw and eats the insect. Venus Fly traps need to eat insects to get nutrients like Nitrogen. Their habitat is marshes and bogs and it is poor in nutrients so they eat bugs to give them nutrients.
Venus fly traps digest their prey by secreting enzymes that break down the trapped insect's body into nutrients, which are then absorbed by the plant for energy and growth.
Bogs are oxygen poor because there is no water movement to cycle oxygen from the air into the water, thus, oxygen is used up in decomposition of species in the bog. Because of this, carnivorous plants receive their nutrients from eating insects instead of sucking up nutrients from the bog. It's all about adapting to your environment.
I don't think venus fly traps have gas.
No, Venus Fly Traps do not eliminate aphids.Specifically, the plant in question (Dionaea muscipula) is a carnivore that includes insects among its prey. By consuming insects, a Venus Fly Trap makes up for a lack of nutrients in the soils in which it tends to grow. But aphids (Aphidoidea superfamily) mature to sizes that are too small for Venus Fly Traps to consume.
no there were no venus fly traps. but there where paintings.
The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous plant. It takes nutrients from insects and Spiders that become trapped inside its leaves.
Venus fly traps primarily eat insects such as flies, ants, beetles, and spiders. They are attracted to the plant's bait, which consists of nectar and a sweet scent, and once an insect triggers the trap by touching the tiny hairs inside, the trap closes shut to capture its prey.