no
no, not at all.
only indoors as a house plant, they will not grow or survive outside
tropical weather like moist and wet
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.
Venus fly traps reproduce sexually through pollination and seed production. In their natural habitat, they also reproduce asexually through division of their rhizomes or by producing plantlets that grow into new individuals.
warm and humid conditions are best but in any climate it will survive!
Venus fly traps are not native to Vermont and typically grow in the wild in the coastal plains of North and South Carolina in the United States. However, you may be able to find Venus fly traps in specialized plant nurseries or botanical gardens in Vermont.
no
Sundews and venus fly traps are producers but they are also consumers. Since they make their own food by photosynthesis, they are producers. To make that food, they must trap and digest insects and absorb the nutrients that are missing from the soil they grow in. That means they are also consumers.
McIntosh Apples grow mainly in New York State!!!
you have to do it for Venus fly traps and it is called Dormancy Period. 100 percent positive because i work at a green house.
up state