Venus Flytrap
(Dionaea
muscipula)
Venus
flytrap is a carnivorous plant native to subtropical wetlands on the East Coast
of the United States. Its common name refers to Venus, the Roman goddess of
love. The genus name, Dionaea,
(daughter of Dione) refers to the Greek goddess Aphrodite while the species
name, muscipula, is Latin for
mousetrap. Historically, the plant was also known by the slang term
“tipitiwitchet” or “tippity twichet” which is a possibly oblique reference to
the plant’s resemblance to human female genitalia.
Dionaea muscipula is one of the
very small groups of plants capable of rapid movement such as Mimosa, the
Telegraph plant, sundews and bladderworts. It is small in stature and slow
growing. It has a structure that can be described as a rosette of four to seven
leaves which arise from a short subterranean stem that is actually a bulb-like
object. Each stem reaches a maximum size of about three to ten centimeters. It
has also longer leaves with robust traps which are usually formed after
flowering. Its leaf blades were divided into two regions, the flat heart-shaped
photosynthesis capable petiole and a pair of terminal lobes hinged at the
midrib forming the trap which is the true leaf. Its lobes exhibit rapid plant
movement snapping shut in about one tenth of a second when stimulated by a
prey. The upper surface of its lobes contains red anthocyanin pigments and its
edges secrete mucilage.
Nutritional
poverty of the soil is the reason that a plant relies on such elaborate traps where
insect prey provides the nitrogen for protein formation that the soil cannot.
The Venus flytrap which is a carnivorous plant is fed on specific prey which is
limited to beetles, spiders and other crawling arthropods. Its diet is 33%
ants, 30% spiders, 10% beetles, 10% grasshoppers and 5% flying insects. It uses
its leaves that have three hairs for each lobe to trap the insect. If these
hairs were touched by its prey spontaneously, these hairs give a signal that
triggers the trap to close and locked its prey. If the prey is unable to scape,
it will continue to stimulate the inner surface of the lobes and this causes a
further growth response that forces the edges of the lobes together eventually
sealing the trap hermetically and forming a stomach in which digestion occurs.
Digestion takes about ten days, after which the prey is reduced to a husk of
chitin. The trap then reopens and is ready for reuse. However, each trap is
only good for four to six catches. After that, the trap withers, turn brown and
falls off.
The
Venus flytrap has unique characteristics inspite of being a carnivorous plant.
It produces scapes of white flowers in spring indicating its good and healthy
condition. However, growers remove the flowering stem early as flowering
consumes some of the plant’s energy and reduces the rate of trap production. Its
trapping mechanism can distinguish between living prey and non-living stimuli
such as falling raindrops. The speed of closing of its trap varies depending on
the amount of humidity, light, size of prey and general growing conditions.
Venus flytrap can tolerate fire well and mild winters even if it is not a
tropical plant. In fact, Venus flytrap that do not go through a period of
winter dormancy will weaken and die after a period of time.
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