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Caroline Donnelly
The Hunting Strategies of Carnivorous Plants
by Caroline Donnelly - February 13, 2008 - 5:57 PM

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Not the blood-thirsty Audrey II from Little Shop of Horrors – we’re talking about the very real plants that feast on insects and invertebrates. Carnivorous plants are usually found in environments with low-nutrient soil, like bogs and swamps, where they thrive on the sunshine and warm temperatures. Contrary to popular belief, carnivorous plants don’t derive their energy from their prey, merely nutrients. Especially nitrogen.

The really cool thing about carnivorous plants (aside from the fact that they hunt and devour prey) is the variety of hunting mechanisms they employ. Some of these traps are more complicated than a spy-movie death apparatus. Here are some of the amazing techniques carnivorous plants use to get their fill. [Image courtesy of Playbill.com.]

Pitcher and Pitfall Plants


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Have you have ever had the misfortune of finding an insect flailing around in a glass of your sugary beverage of choice? That’s the basic mechanism employed by a pitcher plant. They entice prey into their rolled leaf cavities with the lure of bright pigments and nectar at the bottom of a deep, inescapable pit. The insects are intoxicated by (and then drown in) this liquid, which contains bacteria and enzymes that will eventually dissolve their carcasses. The inner tubes utilize a slippery, hairy or grooved surface to make sure even sober insects can’t escape. Forget about rainwater filling the cavity and diluting the digestive juices; most pitcher plants use some sort of umbrella-like contraption to keep water out, usually a flared leaf called an operculum. [Image courtesy of PitcherPlant.org.]

Snap Traps

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In this amazing trap, the convex leaves are covered in triggers that slam shut and become concave when they sense an insect has arrived. Once shut, the lobes of the leaves are stimulated by the struggling insect and grow together to form a stomach. The glands then secrete an enzyme that digests the insect in about ten days. The ever-famous Venus Flytrap is the best example of this vicious hunting style, and there are very few other species that use this technique.

The undirected movement of the leaves in response to touch snapping is a process called thigmonasty (which sounds like a great DJ moniker to me). Just how fast is the process? Well, the Venus Flytrap can close its traps within 100 milliseconds. After digestion, the leaves re-open and can capture another victim, though it’s rare for a single trap to catch more than three insects in its lifetime. Each plant has multiple traps, so it never goes hungry. [Image courtesy of MooseysCountryGarden.com.]

Here’s a YouTube demonstration:

Bladder and Suction Traps

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I don’t particularly like the words bladder or suction, especially when paired with the word trap, but this trap type is incredible. These plants live in the water and use lots of tiny bladders to ensnare dinner. Basically, bladder traps pump ions out from their interiors and use osmosis to create a partial vacuum. If a creature triggers the trap, it is immediately sucked in, along with a bunch of extra water. The plant immediately begins to filter out the water and digest the prey, and it can hunt for more prey as it digests its current catch.

These complicated traps are exclusive to bladderwort plants, which have at least 215 species. Unlike other carnivorous plants, which exclusively eat insects, bladderworts trap water fleas, nematodes, mosquito larvae, small tadpoles and other things you don’t want in your swimming water. Despite their gross-looking traps, bladderworts have beautiful flowers that are similar to orchids and snapdragons, only smaller. [Image courtesy of Carnivorous Plants Online.]

Flypaper Traps

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Just as the name indicates, these plants generate super-sticky glue called mucilage to trap insects. Plants cover their attractive leaves with mucilage, which resemble droplets of fresh dew or rain, and then wait for an insect to land, and fall right into their trap.

Sundew plants are a common but fascinating example of these types of plants. Sure, the name sounds warm and pleasant, but it actually refers to the glistening drops of mucilage at the tip of each tentacle that resemble drops of morning dew. Tentacles and mucilage, gross. Once an insect adheres to the plant, the tentacles very slowly move to wrap around and eventually digest the prey.

The butterwort group of carnivorous plants uses broader leaves rather than tentacles to attract prey. The huge, brightly colored leaves are completely covered in mucilage. Once an insect lands on a leaf, the plant creates more mucilage, causing the struggling insect to become encased in the sticky stuff. Other glands on the leaf secrete digestive juices, and the nutrients are absorbed by the plant leaves. [Image courtesy of Wikipedia.]

Lobster-pot Traps

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Think of these plants as the Roach Motels of carnivorous plants: insects check in, but they don’t check out. The traps are easy and intriguing to enter, but very difficult to escape due to inward-pointing bristles and spiraling parts. The genlisea group of plants uses traps that have all their carnivorous parts beneath the soil. The trap is basically a pair of thin tubes joined in an inverted ‘V’ shape, with spiral grooves down their lengths that allow the entrance of soil-dwelling invertebrates. The grooves are lined with inward-pointing hairs that prevent the prey from escaping and instead force them into the apex of the ‘V,’ where they are slowly digested. [Image courtesy of CarnivorousPlants.org.]

Caroline Donnelly is an occasional contributor to mentalfloss.com. Her last story looked at 7 Famous Phrases Famous People Own.

Comments (12)
  1. Excellent post, Caroline! Thanks!

  2. I’m from Newfoundland and the pitcher plant is our provincial flower! Thought I’d share.

  3. Soooo are these things dangerous to humans? I’m not too crazy about glue-spouting plants and whatnot.

  4. Sarracenia have multiple interior surfaces arranged in zones. The liquid inside does NOT intoxicate insects. The nectar on the exterior of S. flava has been shown to contain intoxicants.

    VFT traps have 3 trigger hairs on each side of the trap.

    “…and it can hunt for more prey as it digests its current catch. ”
    Not with the same trap. The largest bladderwort trap is about 1/4″. It’s highly doubtful a tadpole can fit inside. Wiki has that error too.

    “Unlike other carnivorous plants, which exclusively eat insects..”

    Nepenthes have been found with small rodents inside. My fly traps catch small tree frogs every spring.

    EDIT: this site doesn’t allow links.
    Check out wikipedia or ICPS dot com for accurate info..

    “Soooo are these things dangerous to humans?”
    Only if the humans are cut into small pieces first. ;)

  5. Great article.Plantlife can be just as interesting as the animal kingdom

  6. Very interesting.
    I think that plants might be aware of anything that touches them, if this type of the mentioned hunting strategies was developed by choice or will.

  7. They are cool! and creepy!

    Thanks. Was very interesting to read.

  8. Anyone know how hard these plants are to acquire? Are they endangered? I think that the flypaper plant would be a great thing to have around the house in the summer.

  9. I am thankful that they aren’t free-range plants.

  10. this is interesting. wage says he always wanted a sheet of flypaper(”what?” i said”isnt that what this is talking about?”he replied.).and i have been looking into aquiring (

  11. No such thing as a partial vaccume. That would be everything that isnt a vaccume.

  12. AMAZING…..
    AND VERY INTERESTING

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