Science, asked by umranoorshahi, 3 months ago

which of the following is an insectivorous plant❔​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
15

Answer:

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Insectivorous plants include the Venus flytrap, several types of pitcher plants, butterworts, sundews, bladderworts, the waterwheel plant, brocchinia and many members of the Bromeliaceae.

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Hope it helps uh࿐

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Answered by zumba12
1

The insectivorous plants are Venus flytrap and  California pitcher plant

Explanation:

  • This stunning plant is quickly recognized by its vivid green stalks and bulbous head.... Growing Conditions and Distribution Throughout Northern California and Western Oregon, Darlingtonia californica grows in sunny damp regions near streams or in bogs.
  • Plants that consume insects are known as insectivorous plants, and they get their nutrition from eating insects and other organisms. There are about 750 different species of carnivorous plants on the planet.
  • Plants that feed on insects are partial heterotrophs. Because insectivorous plants, such as pitcher plants, contain chlorophyll, they may prepare their own food, just like green plants. Insectivorous plants, on the other hand, thrive in swamps and bogs with low nitrogen levels in the soil.

Venus flytrap

  1. The Venus flytrap is a carnivorous plant native to North and South Carolina's subtropical wetlands.
  2. A little carnivorous bog plant with hinged leaves that close when disturbed, digesting insects that settle on them. It is a plant that is native to the south-eastern United States and is also kept as an indoor plant.
  3. It catches its prey—mostly insects and arachnids—using a trapping structure made by the terminal portion of each of the plant's leaves, which is triggered by microscopic hairs on the inside surfaces of the leaves.

California pitcher plant

  1. Darlingtonia californica is a carnivorous plant that is also known as the California pitcher plant, cobra lily, or cobra plant.
  2. It is the only member of the Darlingtonia genus in the Sarraceniaceae family. This pitcher plant is found in bogs and seeps with cold running water in Northern California and Oregon, USA.
  3. Due of its rarity in the wild, this plant is classified as rare.
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