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    • Venus Fly Trap
    • Tropical Pitcher Plant
    • Portuguese Sundews
    • Bladderworts
    • Cobra Lily
    • Triphyophyllum
    • Roridula
    • Butterwort
    • Waterwheel Plant
    • Moccasin Plant

    Scientific name: Dionaea muscipula This is the most commonly thought of all insect eating plants, and for good reason. The Venus Fly Trap is native to the North Carolina and South Carolina subtropical wetlands and is fairly small, only half a foot in length. Its unique “jaws” can be triggered by flies and other small insects landing on them, and th...

    Scientific name: Nepenthes alata The Pitcher Plant has evolved to have leaves that resemble champagne flutes that are capable of catching and trapping flies and other insects in their stomach. The thing that truly distinguishes the Tropical Pitcher Plant is the sheer size of it – the “pitchers” of this plant can reach over a foot in height. They ra...

    Scientific name: Drosophyllum lusitanicum The Portuguese Sundew grows in nutrient-poor soil along the coasts of Spain, Portugal, and Morocco. Similar to carnivorous plants like the Pitcher Plant, the Sundew attracts insects with a sweet-smelling nectar that lures them to the plant and to their eventual demise. Unlike the Pitcher Plant, there’s no i...

    Scientific name: Utricularia The Bladderwort is named for its tiny bladders that function as suction cups for insects that happen to float by. It lives in the open water and possesses tiny hair-like feelers to the opening of the bladder that can sense the presence of insects. Their primary food isn’t flies but fleas and other tiny insects that acci...

    Scientific name: Darlingtonia californica The Cobra Lily gets its name for the way it resembles a cobra snake about to strike. It’s also referred to as the Lobster-pot Plant for the way it looks like the pots fishermen use to catch lobsters. Cobra lilies are native to the cold-water bogs of Oregon and northern California. It’s smaller than the pitc...

    Scientific name: Triphyophyllum peltatum The Triphyophyllum is a rare plant found in tropical West Africa with a unique life cycle of three distinct stages. The first is one with unremarkable oval leaves, but once it flowers it produces long and sticky leaves that are capable of attracting, capturing, and finally digesting insects. In its final cyc...

    Scientific name: Roridula Roridula is native to South Africa, and technically isn’t considered to be a carnivorous plant. It has sticky tendrils that trap insects like many of the plants on this list, but it isn’t the one that does the digesting. Instead, they leave that part up to another species of insect – Pameridea roridulae, a small bug specie...

    Scientific name: Pinguicula The Butterwort is named for its broad leaves that almost look like they’ve been coated with butter. It’s native to Eurasia, North America, South America, and Central America. Unlike many of the plants on this list, the Butterwort doesn’t secrete a sweet smell but instead imitates dew for the insects to drink. Once the fl...

    Scientific name: Aldrovanda vesiculosa The Waterwheel Plant is essentially the Venus Fly Trap of the water. It has no real roots, electing instead to float on the surface of lakes and entice bugs with its small traps. These traps come in groupings of 5-9 and are attached like a wheel at the center. Like the Venus Fly Trap, these traps snap shut onc...

    Scientific name: Cypripedium acaule The Moccasin was originally discovered in Southwest Australia, and for all intents and purposes resembles a Pitcher Plant. It has the same shape and uses the same sweet scent to lure them into its moccasin-shaped pitchers where the unfortunate bug is slowly digested. Like the Cobra Lily, this plant posses translu...

  2. Apr 5, 2024 · Insectivorous Plants- Name, Definition and Examples. Insectivorous plants are carnivorous plants that capture and digest insects as a source of nutrients to supplement their diet. Here we have discussed insectivorous plants & its examples in detail.

    • Butterwort. A beautifully dangerous plant, this one bags its name from its butter-like greasy leaflets that carry a sticky substance that assists in catching the bugs.
    • Pitcher Plant. This plant borrows its name from its leaves that shape like an actual pitcher; however, these leaflets can differ in size from plant to plant, as not all plants have gregarious foliage.
    • Sundew. This plant grows with erect and tall bright green leaves that are surrounded by tentacles responsible for producing nectar as an invitation call to the bugs, along with a sticky adhesive to trap the invited guests.
    • Venus Fly Trap. The Venus fly trap appears like a pocket wallet meant for storing coins, the difference being it doesn’t have a closing zip and does have numerous spikes on the leaf’s edges.
  3. Jun 10, 2023 · 1. Venus Flytrap (Dionaea Muscipula) Indigenous to North and South Carolina, the Venus flytrap is probably the most classic and the meanest carnivorous plant of all. Most of the time, these predatory plants thrive in nutrient-poor soils and thus practice carnivory to get more nutrients from insects.

  4. Because insects are one of the most common prey items for most carnivorous plants, they are sometimes called insectivorous plants. It is not surprising that the most common habitat for these plants is in bogs and fens, where nutrient concentrations are low but water and sunshine seasonally abundant.