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Carnivorous Plants Story
Copyright (c) 2013-2017 by Makoto Honda.
All Rights Reserved. Butterworts (2)GENUS Pinguicula There is another kind of gland which is almost buried on the leaf surface. When a nutritious object, such as an insect, or a tiny piece of meat, is placed on the leaf surface, these glands produce digestive fluids. Often, the prey is completely covered with the fluids and digested. Sometimes, the edge of a leaf curls up slowly if the prey is caught near the leaf margin. This helps hold the digestive fluids in place around the prey. As the digestion progresses, the nutrients from the dissolved insect are quickly taken into the leaf and used for various growth activities of the plant.
In early spring, butterworts produce brightly colored flowers at the tip of a slender stem rising from the rosette center. Since butterworts are often covered with surrounding grasses in nature, it is often difficult to find the plants without flowers.
A butterwort flower is bilaterally symmetric (that is, the left and right are the same as in a human face). A flower blooms dangling at the tip of a flower stalk (scape). The corolla is divided into two lips, upper and lower. The upper lip is three-lobed and the lower lip two-lobed. As a result, the flower looks like it has five petals. The middle portion forms a corolla tube that ends in a narrow spur. The spur is a nectar container commonly seen in many flowers. A hairy structure located in the corolla tube is called a palate.
INTRODUCTION
PITFALL TRAPS FLYPAPER
TRAPS SNAP-TRAPS
SUCTION TRAPS VENUS
FLYTRAP SUNDEWS
PITCHER PLANTS COBRA
PLANT BUTTERWORTS
BLADDERWORTS
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