I grow these things and it’s amazing how invasive these things are. If it weren’t for their soil and water limitations these things would be everywhere. Basically the plant can split itself apart at the rhizome and then just expands territory. I started with about 10 plants last year and now I have around 80
@@lolledopke the only difficult thing about carnivorous plants is acclimating them to a new environment. Once you acclimate them all you have to do is leave them outside and make sure they have water in their tray. There’s more to that but that’s pretty much the basics on how to grow them.
I grew up in NC, there was some marshy wet lands on he outskirts of my neighbourhood where there Venus flytraps and pitcher plats every where! It was really cool growing up there. It’s all gone now, they turned into more housing.
my flytraps have just flowered! Something else the flytrap does is go dormant in winter, the whole plant recedes to bulb, to allow the dead leaves to burn off. They rely on the annual fires to keep a clear canopy as they are miniature and unable to photosynthesise as efficiently as unmodified leaves. As far as I know they're endangered in their natural habitat, sortof like tigers.
These fascinate me. Not only are they capable of movement, but to operate the way they do they need to possess something similar to a primitive nervous system and be strong enough to over power the bug trying to get out
In most instances, there's no carcass left, the plant will dissolve the whole bug. However, certain bugs with resilient bodies can resist some of the dissolving. In those cases, the bug still dies but the plant dissolves as much as it can. When there's nothing left to dissolve, the plant will open and the bug will remain, less than half its weight due to dehydration, at which point other bugs or a bird may find it and feed on it or the wind will blow it away.
They explain it in the video. The plant releases enzymes afther the hairs are triggered while closed that disolves the insect so the plant can feed from it.
@@bundleofhumble3119 They do, but he's referencing towards the end when the plant opens and the bug is not completely dissolved, there's still a husk left.
From my experience if the plant catches something bigger, it'll digest it, later on when it's done the leaf opens up and dies, shrivels and falls off. It keeps growing new leaves. The trap basically only needs to work one time anyway.
Fun Fakt: they evolved really long flower stalks because short flower stalk plants were less successfully passing their genes on. They accidentally ate to many of their pollinators.
@@rhyfelwrDuw "Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution" - Theodosius Dobzhansky Everyone is free to believe whatever pleases him/her, I guess. I'll stick with the science ^^
@dflskb im really not interested in challenging your world view but saying stuff like "macro evolution bending laws of physic" shows that you don't quite understand the topic, or base your opinion on someone who doesn't. Evolution is considered a scientific fact and is not up for debate, mutch like the shape of the earth. Abiogenesis is a different story, I give you that. We are proof that it happened and we have some hypothesises how it happened but it's hard to proof what exactly happened 3.5 billion years ago. And that's the keyword, proof.
They didn’t mean the whole thing shuts completely in that length of time. They were referring to the process of the trigger + electrical charge + water displacement all happening in 1/10th of a second, which causes it to shut. Then as the prey moves it continues to shut more.
From a fish (hagfish) surviving a shark attack and chocking the shark to death..to rat killing and eating snake.. to this ..just imagine your daily snack trying or even killing you🤣🤣
There is one error spread here: The wild form of Dionaea does not produce nectar drops and does not attract prey from a distance. Even your shown plants in this film are dry like the wild form! Studies show that the "nectar" in particular cultivated plants with thick drops (yes, in cultivated plants only) is the result of breeding in masses for the hobby market. By this, a very sensitive and balanced mechanism has been destroyed, that in nature leads i.e. small ants over the trigger hairs by building a path with traces of volatile aromes, produced by the alluring glands in the wild form. To capture such small ants would need more energy for closing and opening large traps than small ants provide. The path of volatile aromes along the upper edge, combined with the fact that 2 touches of the trigger hairs are necessary to close the trap is a sophisticated mechanism, investigated and published in 2019: "Dionaea traps selectively allow small animals to escape." by Siegfried R. H. Hartmeyer, Irmgard Hartmeyer and Stephen E. Williams in Carnivorous Plant Newsletter Vol. 48/4: 153-160. Dear BBC, this paper is indeed worth a read.
I got a thought that during the Jurassic era, there must have been giant fly traps, which wouldn't be called fly traps, because flys would be too small for them. Imagine living in the Jurassic era and your dog gets trapped inside a giant fly trap! !!
Esta planta é linda e bem armadilhada! Fiquei a saber que não é selectiva naquilo que mata!! Incrível estas habilidades complexas e os grandes espinhos...será que se pusessemos lá um dedo ...ficaríamos sem ele?!
nao ficaria sem o seu dedo Maria, nem de perto. Quanto ao ser selectiva, isto é um video orquestrado. No habitat a esmagadora maioria das presas são pequenas aranhas e aranhiços.
Last time I heard about it somewhere it was some nonsense about some cells dying and some dividing into new driving the closing process of the plant's "mouth", but it could never explain the speed of it closing! This about water pressure makes me doubt too, the plants leaf mouth didn't change colour or shape when doing it as the movement of water should give as a consequence, and it should make the mouth opening for a second time of hunting bugs not being possible. I myself believe that plants have a spirit, not an conscious soul although, explaining it's possibility to move! I as a child have seen another plant (some kind of bracken/fern) curl together almost all it's leaves when I touched it, but that's just a waste of energy, and how it can close and reopen leaves several times? I think that's kinda impossible, I think that plants have an spirit that give it energy instead.
Fun fact: Scientists have never been able to come up with a hypothesis on how these plants evolved. Most plant evolution is pretty basic, so its understandable how small mutations can end up with big changes over time, but since this trap requires a very specific construction to work, no one can figure out how it went from just a regular leaf to successfully catching insects.
they are descended from the same family as the pitcher (modified flower). The process of going from leaf to trap has happened in other plants, too, in a process called convergent evolution. The traps did not appear overnight, their ancestors had different traps. First described as a miniature sensitive, as all plants are sensitive to a greater or lesser degree.
ua-cam.com/video/CAUOhG_c4Go/v-deo.html this video explains it a bit. In the end they state that all plants have the genetic code to become carnivores if in the right environment.
@@hatakekakashi8174 that’s what evolution is tho. Just random shit that happens bc of mutation and that mutation ends up helping them survive, so they stay
God's creation is beautiful! Same God who created us and our universe. Nothing is made in vain. One day we will meet Him and account for out actions. Prophet Muhammad was the last in a long line of Messengers sent by God to teach mankind how to live. Adam, Noah, ibrahim, Moses, Jesus all prophets sent by God. Read the Quran, your heart will melt, and you will find the purpose of life and will not screw your after life which is the real life.
@@Memorize-Quran-With-Me god dont exist pal if he did where is he why doesnt he help the people in need we all know it was the big bang that created this world not god 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💪
@@seanlinesteammvg4967 so you believe you were created from nothing.... as a result of countless accidents over time.....to the ridiculously amazing form of a human being......and then will die and become nothing....forever? Buddy I dont have enough faith to follow your religion. You stick to yours, ill stick to mine. Peace
@@Memorize-Quran-With-Me god doesnt exist mate people want to beliveve that becuase there so scared of death they want to believe that theres a god how many 100s of millions of years have humans been around and not seen god once work that out and tell me if hes allmighty and that why dont he help the needed instead of doing nothing answer me that bet ya cant
Correction: These plants are endemic to Eastern North Carolina and it is a Felony to touch 1. They exist nowhere else on earth naturally. Sorry to Split Hairs, but they should've done they're information properly.
@@Shepard_AU Don't feel bad. I'm from North Carolina and thought my entire life that these plants were from an exotic rainforest in the Amazon. I was stunned to learn that the were in my backyard so to speak and grew only in N.C. But yeah, it's a trip for sure.
These things are legit endangered in the wild too. Although with how many people (who know how to care for them) grow them they’ll really never go completely extinct. I mean have you seen those huge greenhouses that grow them? It’s like a corn field but with carnivorous plants lmao
In the next few hundred years, I doubt this plant will flower. The plant makes more of itself through ribosome divisions. The seed process takes over 3 years for the plant to mature, whereas the ribosome division often times make 1 mature plant into 2 mature plants
when it opens and has a dead bug there, does that not warn other bugs or distract from the sweet nectar that attracts them? what happens if the dead bugs cover the sensor hairs? how come there's no other dead bugs in any of the open leaves, do they somehow remove the dead bug?
So after the trap opens back up and the bug is dried up dead, how does the plant get the dead body out? Does it wait on the wind to blow it off or what
I grow these things and it’s amazing how invasive these things are. If it weren’t for their soil and water limitations these things would be everywhere. Basically the plant can split itself apart at the rhizome and then just expands territory. I started with about 10 plants last year and now I have around 80
Does it ever say, Feed me Seymour?
@@leonhardeuler675 sadly no, although if they talked I would have gone mad
I thought they were difficult to grow, for example having to go into hibernation during winter...?
@@lolledopke the only difficult thing about carnivorous plants is acclimating them to a new environment. Once you acclimate them all you have to do is leave them outside and make sure they have water in their tray. There’s more to that but that’s pretty much the basics on how to grow them.
If you planet them outside wouldnt it remove the need to be carnivorious?
That snail’s just like, “oh dear, I seem to have gotten myself into a pickle again.”
I could have never guessed that these plants are native to the Carolinas.
Yeah. Seems like this would belong in Australia. The land where everything is made to kill everything.
@@jamesdavidwyers9110 you haven’t been to the Carolinas? 😂
Your Carolina has been completely urbanized you have no idea what’s original what’s imported
Yeah, I've never really thought about it but I'd have guessed they were from somewhere like the Amazon rainforest.
I've lived in NC since 2003. Never knew this or seen one here.
I kept a couple of these as "pets" as a kid. Very cool plants.
I did too. I bought mine from a magazine back in the early 60's.
I always use these kinds of plants to remind people: plants may not be sentient or conscience like you or I, but they are very much living things.
That'll probably make That Vegan Teacher's head explode
@@rengganis-------9900 don’t nobody care
@chris Evans india Ah crap, she hasn't gotten you too, has she??
@chris Evans india yes but they also evolve and survive, they can still be extinct
@chris Evans india thats right.
Very good video. I would recommend lowering the volume of the background music so the narration is easier to hear.
Sounded fine to me.
1:10 "A hair must be touched twice in rapid succession for the trap to close."
Imagine that - a *plant* recognizing being touched twice in a row.
More than you
More than you
More than you
More then you
I remember having a plant like this back in my elementry school, from what I remember it folds in on itself when something disturbs it.
That was amazing. Our world is so amazing. I can watch this all day. Love this channel!
Hey Girl i need your opinion on the first clip if you are a fan of PUBG MOBILE❤️
What a fascinating process! I’ve always wondered how they moved and now I know
definitely god created them in blink of an eye.lol
You cant learn much from this video. It's not exactly in-depth with knowledge.. atleast 1 thing I know of is wrong, the 100mS is bullshit
The fact that it uses the natural tendency of prey to struggle to its advantage is crazy
I grew up in NC, there was some marshy wet lands on he outskirts of my neighbourhood where there Venus flytraps and pitcher plats every where! It was really cool growing up there. It’s all gone now, they turned into more housing.
@von facts 😭
F** those housing companies. That area needs to be off limits for house building so the Venus flytraps can be spread out
Always glad to hear about carnivorous plants!
"I'M TIRED OF DRINKIN'! I WANNA CHEW!" - the first venus fly trap
Love how the snail keeps eating unaware that he's trapped for life
The snail is the one critter that might get away. It can eat its way out.
just like after the wedding...
It will easily escape, just like beetles. The plant is not that strong. A hard shell like what a beetle or snail has would easily get the insect out
I have one of these.It's incredible,seen it in action.In the summer,I keep it in my garden.In one day I saw 3 jaws made a catch.Interesting!!!
Got 2 just now I love them. Love when they catch flys or blue bottles as well.
I live in NC and I always go into the woods and find these plants there pretty Kool and keep flys and other bugs out of your house like spiders
Where at in North Carolina?
my flytraps have just flowered! Something else the flytrap does is go dormant in winter, the whole plant recedes to bulb, to allow the dead leaves to burn off. They rely on the annual fires to keep a clear canopy as they are miniature and unable to photosynthesise as efficiently as unmodified leaves. As far as I know they're endangered in their natural habitat, sortof like tigers.
That has to be such a horrible feeling of being crushed to death just because you wanted some food or something sweet
Insects don’t have brains or feelings like humans.
Who cares, insects especially flies are absolutely rancid
Well I think they’re drowned in fluid rather than crushed
@@cookncrook6902 They do have feelings. They can feel fear.
high carb diets are lethal lol
These fascinate me. Not only are they capable of movement, but to operate the way they do they need to possess something similar to a primitive nervous system and be strong enough to over power the bug trying to get out
My mom gave me one when I was younger. She used to work as a florist.
@P RoWa I agree
Then what? How is the carcass disposed of? Guess I'll do some research on my own! But, that's OK. It was a great video!
In most instances, there's no carcass left, the plant will dissolve the whole bug. However, certain bugs with resilient bodies can resist some of the dissolving. In those cases, the bug still dies but the plant dissolves as much as it can. When there's nothing left to dissolve, the plant will open and the bug will remain, less than half its weight due to dehydration, at which point other bugs or a bird may find it and feed on it or the wind will blow it away.
They explain it in the video.
The plant releases enzymes afther the hairs are triggered while closed that disolves the insect so the plant can feed from it.
@@bundleofhumble3119 They do, but he's referencing towards the end when the plant opens and the bug is not completely dissolved, there's still a husk left.
I get paid to smoke weed on my UA-cam channel , normal jobs are soon to obsolete due to self checkouts & NFTs !😳
From my experience if the plant catches something bigger, it'll digest it, later on when it's done the leaf opens up and dies, shrivels and falls off. It keeps growing new leaves. The trap basically only needs to work one time anyway.
Fun Fakt: they evolved really long flower stalks because short flower stalk plants were less successfully passing their genes on. They accidentally ate to many of their pollinators.
Seems to be common among carnivorous plants. Sundews also have long flower stalks.
Nothing evolved because evolution makes no sense whatsoever!
@@rhyfelwrDuw "Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution" - Theodosius Dobzhansky
Everyone is free to believe whatever pleases him/her, I guess. I'll stick with the science ^^
@@rhyfelwrDuw Guess you never heard of antibiotic resistant germs - a.k.a. natural selection at work.
@dflskb im really not interested in challenging your world view but saying stuff like "macro evolution bending laws of physic" shows that you don't quite understand the topic, or base your opinion on someone who doesn't. Evolution is considered a scientific fact and is not up for debate, mutch like the shape of the earth.
Abiogenesis is a different story, I give you that. We are proof that it happened and we have some hypothesises how it happened but it's hard to proof what exactly happened 3.5 billion years ago. And that's the keyword, proof.
Disclaimer: No bugs were hurt doing filming
2:15 Same could not be said for the tiny camera man...
No bugs were hurt during Filming
“They were killed”
The background music was bad because it was jarring and severely interfered with the commentary.
Love how bbc makes close ups.
Nature never ceases to amaze me.
It's so beautiful and amazing but so many dangerous .. Everyone stay safe 😆🖤🤍🖤
Imagine if they was giant size and a person stepped on one
Interesting!
Poison Ivy : My plants will feed on your corpse Batman and everyone in Gotham
triffids
Im stuck please help
@@mikkodoria4778 cut it with knife. Thats why do not forget to bring knife😂😂🤣
These shots are just amazing as always
Now I know the plan has spirit, but more than that, the way you deliver was amazing🌈
You say they close in 1/10th of a second, but none of the clips looked slowed down, and it looked way slower then 1/10th of a second
They didn’t mean the whole thing shuts completely in that length of time. They were referring to the process of the trigger + electrical charge + water displacement all happening in 1/10th of a second, which causes it to shut. Then as the prey moves it continues to shut more.
From a fish (hagfish) surviving a shark attack and chocking the shark to death..to rat killing and eating snake.. to this ..just imagine your daily snack trying or even killing you🤣🤣
I like when the Venus Fly Trap eats the bugs
Its Carnivine , the grass pokemon.
Yup
I am cultivating them, they are beautiful and evolved species.❤🌌
Needed something to watch whilst cleaning up both my VFT’s
Brilliant but the music is too loud , it's hard to hear the commentary
As long as they stick to bugs, I say more power to 'em!!
the music is too loud
Fascinating ! But why the loud music ?!?
The video Good but who edited it and what was the point of adding the overlays
The mechanism for the trap is really clever. God did a good job creating this one. 🙄
background music overpowers the narration.
There is one error spread here: The wild form of Dionaea does not produce nectar drops and does not attract prey from a distance. Even your shown plants in this film are dry like the wild form! Studies show that the "nectar" in particular cultivated plants with thick drops (yes, in cultivated plants only) is the result of breeding in masses for the hobby market. By this, a very sensitive and balanced mechanism has been destroyed, that in nature leads i.e. small ants over the trigger hairs by building a path with traces of volatile aromes, produced by the alluring glands in the wild form. To capture such small ants would need more energy for closing and opening large traps than small ants provide. The path of volatile aromes along the upper edge, combined with the fact that 2 touches of the trigger hairs are necessary to close the trap is a sophisticated mechanism, investigated and published in 2019: "Dionaea traps selectively allow small animals to escape." by Siegfried R. H. Hartmeyer, Irmgard Hartmeyer and Stephen E. Williams in Carnivorous Plant Newsletter Vol. 48/4: 153-160. Dear BBC, this paper is indeed worth a read.
What happens to the carcass? How does it get removed?
The Venus flytrap is a formidable predator, and not a cute plant, as it might seem at first glance.
I got a thought that during the Jurassic era, there must have been giant fly traps, which wouldn't be called fly traps, because flys would be too small for them. Imagine living in the Jurassic era and your dog gets trapped inside a giant fly trap! !!
Or you
That snail didn't look too worried.
So how do they get rid of the processed carcass? I don't think the stem is able to move to shake it off, right?
...is it vegan to eat those plants??!🤔😁
I’m getting one. I’m so happy.🎉
Watching this while high. Currently in panic. Plant goes CHOMP CHOMP
Esta planta é linda e bem armadilhada! Fiquei a saber que não é selectiva naquilo que mata!! Incrível estas habilidades complexas e os grandes espinhos...será que se pusessemos lá um dedo ...ficaríamos sem ele?!
nao ficaria sem o seu dedo Maria, nem de perto. Quanto ao ser selectiva, isto é um video orquestrado. No habitat a esmagadora maioria das presas são pequenas aranhas e aranhiços.
hi. a short critique to the video.
the background music is a bit too loud to hear what the person is saying.
Thanks
Last time I heard about it somewhere it was some nonsense about some cells dying and some dividing into new driving the closing process of the plant's "mouth", but it could never explain the speed of it closing! This about water pressure makes me doubt too, the plants leaf mouth didn't change colour or shape when doing it as the movement of water should give as a consequence, and it should make the mouth opening for a second time of hunting bugs not being possible. I myself believe that plants have a spirit, not an conscious soul although, explaining it's possibility to move! I as a child have seen another plant (some kind of bracken/fern) curl together almost all it's leaves when I touched it, but that's just a waste of energy, and how it can close and reopen leaves several times? I think that's kinda impossible, I think that plants have an spirit that give it energy instead.
They are perfectly joining as how perfect we join fingers of our both hands.
There are a lot on Camp Lejeune & pitcher plants & many other carnivorous plants
Fun fact: Scientists have never been able to come up with a hypothesis on how these plants evolved. Most plant evolution is pretty basic, so its understandable how small mutations can end up with big changes over time, but since this trap requires a very specific construction to work, no one can figure out how it went from just a regular leaf to successfully catching insects.
Spoiler alert: they didn't evolve.
Yes it wasn't god, just coincidence
they are descended from the same family as the pitcher (modified flower). The process of going from leaf to trap has happened in other plants, too, in a process called convergent evolution. The traps did not appear overnight, their ancestors had different traps. First described as a miniature sensitive, as all plants are sensitive to a greater or lesser degree.
ua-cam.com/video/CAUOhG_c4Go/v-deo.html this video explains it a bit. In the end they state that all plants have the genetic code to become carnivores if in the right environment.
@@hatakekakashi8174 that’s what evolution is tho. Just random shit that happens bc of mutation and that mutation ends up helping them survive, so they stay
How does it get the prey out of it's "mouth"? Does the rain wash it away?
Um conhecimento afeta seu cérebro 🧠
Greatness
This is a plant that the Addams family would grow.
So what happens to the "shrivelled remains" inside? How is it disposed off by the plant? I was expecting an explanation
The remains are just the exoskeleton, which is very light. A slight breeze blows it away, or rainfall washes it out.
@@blujay1608 Oh yeah. Hadn't thought about it like that. Thanks
Pure beuty one of the worlds great plants
God's creation is beautiful! Same God who created us and our universe. Nothing is made in vain. One day we will meet Him and account for out actions. Prophet Muhammad was the last in a long line of Messengers sent by God to teach mankind how to live. Adam, Noah, ibrahim, Moses, Jesus all prophets sent by God. Read the Quran, your heart will melt, and you will find the purpose of life and will not screw your after life which is the real life.
@@Memorize-Quran-With-Me god dont exist pal if he did where is he why doesnt he help the people in need we all know it was the big bang that created this world not god 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💪
@@seanlinesteammvg4967 so you believe you were created from nothing.... as a result of countless accidents over time.....to the ridiculously amazing form of a human being......and then will die and become nothing....forever? Buddy I dont have enough faith to follow your religion. You stick to yours, ill stick to mine. Peace
@@Memorize-Quran-With-Me god doesnt exist mate people want to beliveve that becuase there so scared of death they want to believe that theres a god how many 100s of millions of years have humans been around and not seen god once work that out and tell me if hes allmighty and that why dont he help the needed instead of doing nothing answer me that bet ya cant
@@Memorize-Quran-With-Me exaclty u cant sucker
This is terrifying
I've grown up my entire life hearing Sir David Attenborough's voice. Anybody else just seems like an imposter at this point.
Faster than a blinking eye, i blinked a few times and the trap was still closing
Ikr. I kinda wished they showed it full speed. Unless they did and it isn't as fast as he said.
@@docdominus some fly traps do shut quicker than others, i think it depends on their size
What happens to the carcass left inside it though ? Does it get cleaned up somehow ? Or does it accumulate until it can no longer close its "mouth" ?
Always have loved the Venus Fly Trap! Such beauty. 🖤
Good video, informative, but music istoo loud. As many videos.
That is awesome .........🔥
Correction:
These plants are endemic to Eastern North Carolina and it is a Felony to touch 1.
They exist nowhere else on earth naturally.
Sorry to Split Hairs, but they should've done they're information properly.
I looked that up and you’re right. I thought these things would’ve at least also been native in the Amazon rain forest or those sorts of places.
@@Shepard_AU
Don't feel bad.
I'm from North Carolina and thought my entire life that these plants were from an exotic rainforest in the Amazon.
I was stunned to learn that the were in my backyard so to speak and grew only in N.C.
But yeah, it's a trip for sure.
These things are legit endangered in the wild too. Although with how many people (who know how to care for them) grow them they’ll really never go completely extinct. I mean have you seen those huge greenhouses that grow them? It’s like a corn field but with carnivorous plants lmao
There’s specifically one national park in NC where they grow and that’s it
@@bouncyblight2001
Yep.
People like us are more educated and thorough than the people at bbc.
Sad but true.
Wow. I didnt think itd look so red inside after it reopened. It looked like a legit massacre.
Color is a sign of being in bright sun, not what it consumed
That’s a different type of cultivar. Its called red dragon. It’s not because it’s had something to eat, it’s just the way that cultivar of plant is
Did they put their logo over their own logo?
more carnivorous plant content bbc hell yeahhhh
Reduce the music volume please...and increase the voice volume.
سبحان الله الخالق العظيم
beautiful
hmmm i dont remember the trap reopening , once a trap is close it turn black
It needs fertilizer. To the Venus, the insect's life is worth less than the minerals it is made of. Savage. I love it.
How does it remove the corpse? Wind?
These killers are so cool!
Oh look, it's Carnivine!
Love the Pink Floyd in the background
I decided a long time ago to not plant any shrubs or trees in my yard that might try to Eat me.
Have one of these plants in every home!
Sick video!
I kind of kind it funny, that the venusplant just went like
Cameraperson: beautieful establishmentshot this
Flytrap: NomNoMNoM Tasty Camera yay
Nice information
@Viorr 💞 fake
Do South Chicago next….
It sad as these types of plants do help us but they're not on sale in garden shop
That proof plant is a creature with soul
Yes but how do they get the old 'meal' out then?
سبحان الله سبحان الخالق ❤️
Subhanallah! Maakhalakta hazhaa baatilaa! Faqina azaaban naar! Ameen
What happens to the insect's carcass?
In the next few hundred years, I doubt this plant will flower. The plant makes more of itself through ribosome divisions. The seed process takes over 3 years for the plant to mature, whereas the ribosome division often times make 1 mature plant into 2 mature plants
when it opens and has a dead bug there, does that not warn other bugs or distract from the sweet nectar that attracts them? what happens if the dead bugs cover the sensor hairs? how come there's no other dead bugs in any of the open leaves, do they somehow remove the dead bug?
Wind/Rain blows the carcass away.
depends on which lawyer they use.
What happens to the shriveled corpses? Do they just stay there or...
Leaves behind their exoskeleton
So after the trap opens back up and the bug is dried up dead, how does the plant get the dead body out? Does it wait on the wind to blow it off or what
Yes, the left over husk is very brittle, so a gust of wind or raindrop will break it up and flush it out.
@@WTFuToob very informative thanks
What is that music at the end?