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Carnivorous Plants What is a carnivorous plant? • Most carnivorous plants are autotrophic (photosynthetic) but live in nutrient-poor habitats • They get extra nutrients, especially nitrogen and phosphorus, from capturing and digesting small animals • The leaves of carnivorous plants are adapted for capturing animals Leaves of carnivorous plants can be sticky, as in sundews (above left), pitchers (above right), or snap traps, such as Venus fly trap Mississippi is home to four types of carnivorous plants: • • • • Sundews Butterworts Pitcher plants Bladderworts © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA wwww.mississippiplants.org Key to Symbols HABIT Herb Simple <5 cm long Small Tree/Shrub LEAVES Compound <5 cm long Large Tree Simple >5 cm long Compound >5 cm long FLOWERS <1 cm 1-5 cm >5 cm Distribution maps for species are based on the PLANTS Database, USDA, NRCS. 2014. (http://plants.usda.gov) National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC. Photo Credits: M. Alford, M. Huneycutt, H. Sullivan, L. Wallace Sundews Drosera spp. Identifying Features • Sticky green leaves • The most diverse group of carnivorous plants in North America • 5 species in Mississippi • Grow in bogs of the Longleaf Pine Ecosystem A B C A: Drosera brevifolia flower; B: leaves; C: closeup of leaves showing sticky hairs Present Absent © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA wwww.mississippiplants.org Questions Grades K-2: 1. What does this plant use its leaves for? 2. How does this plant trap insects? Grades 3-5: 1. What does this plant get from the insects it traps in its leaves? 2. How are pollinators different from the insects it traps in its leaves? Grades 6-8: 1. What are the basic things this plant needs to live and reproduce? How does it get each of these? 2. What place in the food web would this plant be? Grades 9-12: 1. Carnivory has evolved independently in different groups of angiosperms. Explain the selective pressures necessary for carnivory to evolve in plants. 2. What nutrients are derived from the insects that are digested by this plant versus those obtained through the root system? © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA www.mississippiplants.org Butterworts Pinguicula spp. Identifying Features • Sticky leaves • Unlike sundews, the leaves of butterworts lie flat on the ground • 4 species in Mississippi • Grow in bogs of the Longleaf Pine Ecosystem A B A: leaves; B: flower Present Absent © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA wwww.mississippiplants.org Questions Grades K-2: 1. What does this plant use its leaves for? 2. How does this plant trap insects? Grades 3-5: 1. What does this plant get from the insects it traps in its leaves? 2. How are pollinators different from the insects it traps in its leaves? Grades 6-8: 1. What are the basic things this plant needs to live and reproduce? How does it get each of these? 2. What place in the food web would this plant be? Grades 9-12: 1. Carnivory has evolved independently in different groups of angiosperms. Explain the selective pressures necessary for carnivory to evolve in plants. 2. What nutrients are derived from the insects that are digested by this plant versus those obtained through the root system? © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA www.mississippiplants.org Pitcher Plants Sarracenia spp. Identifying Features • Leaves are like pitchers filling with rainwater • Curious animals that come for a drink or to investigate the pitchers fall in and are digested by the plant • 6 species in Mississippi • Grow in Longleaf Pine bogs B A C A: habit; B: looking down into a pitcher; C: pitcher Present Absent © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA wwww.mississippiplants.org Questions Grades K-2: 1. What does this plant use its leaves for? 2. How does this plant trap insects? Grades 3-5: 1. What does this plant get from the insects it traps in its leaves? 2. How are pollinators different from the insects it traps in its leaves? Grades 6-8: 1. What are the basic things this plant needs to live and reproduce? How does it get each of these? 2. What place in the food web would this plant be? Grades 9-12: 1. Carnivory has evolved independently in different groups of angiosperms. Explain the selective pressures necessary for carnivory to evolve in plants. 2. What nutrients are derived from the insects that are digested by this plant versus those obtained through the root system? © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA www.mississippiplants.org Bladderworts Utricularia spp. Identifying Features • Leaves are inflated bladders that suck in plankton • 11 species in Mississippi • Grow in roadside ditches, ponds, and other areas with standing water A A: U. inflata in its natural habitat; B: detail of the modified leaves B Present Absent © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA wwww.mississippiplants.org Questions Grades K-2: 1. What does this plant use its leaves for? 2. How does this plant trap insects? Grades 3-5: 1. What does this plant get from the insects it traps in its leaves? 2. How are pollinators different from the insects it traps in its leaves? Grades 6-8: 1. What are the basic things this plant needs to live and reproduce? How does it get each of these? 2. What place in the food web would this plant be? Grades 9-12: 1. Carnivory has evolved independently in different groups of angiosperms. Explain the selective pressures necessary for carnivory to evolve in plants. 2. What nutrients are derived from the insects that are digested by this plant versus those obtained through the root system? © Project Magnolia grandiFLORA www.mississippiplants.org