A hungry fly tiptoes across a sweet-smelling leaf, looking for a meal. Suddenly the leaf closes around it! This insect has been caught by a carnivorous plant—one that attracts and kills animals for food. There are more than 600 species of these types of plants around the world.
Like all plants, carnivorous plants make their own food using photosynthesis. Powered by the sun’s energy, they combine water and carbon dioxide to make sugar. Plants also suck up nutrients from the soil through their roots.
But carnivorous plants grow in wetlands and bogs, where the soil is low in nutrients. To survive, they have developed the ability to feed on small animals. “It’s a way to get nutrients the soil can’t provide,” says Liane Cochran-Stafira. She’s an ecologist at Saint Xavier University in Chicago. Read on to learn about the traps these plants use to capture prey.