Botanical carnivory is a novel feeding strategy associated with numerous physiological and morphological adaptations. However, the benefits of these novel carnivorous traits are rarely tested. We used field observations, lab experiments, and a semi-natural experiment to test prey capture function of the marginal spikes on snap traps of the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula). Our field and laboratory results suggested inefficient capture success: fewer than 1 in 4 prey encounters led to prey capture. Removing the marginal spikes decreased the rate of prey capture success for moderate-sized cricket prey by 90%, but this effect disappeared for larger prey. The nonlinear benefit of spikes suggests that they provide a better cage for capturing mo...
The feeding response of Venus flytraps (Dionaea muscipula) is widely studied, and many studies have ...
Because carnivorous plants rely on arthropods as pollinators and prey, they risk consuming would-be ...
Ecological traps occur when rapid environmental change causes animals to actually prefer inferior ha...
Botanical carnivory is a novel feeding strategy associated with numerous physiological and morpholog...
Botanical carnivory is a novel feeding strategy associated with numerous physiological and morpholog...
Venus fly traps (Dionaea muscipula Ellis) are carnivorous plants that live in nutrient poor soils an...
Among carnivorous plants, Darwin was particularly fascinated by the speed and sensitivity of snap-tr...
The Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula), first described by Charles Darwin, is a unique carnivorous pl...
Among carnivorous plants, the Venus flytrap is of particular interest for the rapid movement of its ...
Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) has had a conservation status of vulnerable since the 1970s. Littl...
The evolutionary roots of carnivory in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) stem from a defense res...
Predators exhibit flexible foraging to facilitate taking prey that offer important nutrients. Becaus...
1. The functional features of carnivorous plants’ traps have been mostly interpreted as adaptations ...
The evolutionary roots of carnivory in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) stem from a defense res...
The feeding response of Venus flytraps (Dionaea muscipula) is widely studied, and many studies have ...
Because carnivorous plants rely on arthropods as pollinators and prey, they risk consuming would-be ...
Ecological traps occur when rapid environmental change causes animals to actually prefer inferior ha...
Botanical carnivory is a novel feeding strategy associated with numerous physiological and morpholog...
Botanical carnivory is a novel feeding strategy associated with numerous physiological and morpholog...
Venus fly traps (Dionaea muscipula Ellis) are carnivorous plants that live in nutrient poor soils an...
Among carnivorous plants, Darwin was particularly fascinated by the speed and sensitivity of snap-tr...
The Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula), first described by Charles Darwin, is a unique carnivorous pl...
Among carnivorous plants, the Venus flytrap is of particular interest for the rapid movement of its ...
Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) has had a conservation status of vulnerable since the 1970s. Littl...
The evolutionary roots of carnivory in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) stem from a defense res...
Predators exhibit flexible foraging to facilitate taking prey that offer important nutrients. Becaus...
1. The functional features of carnivorous plants’ traps have been mostly interpreted as adaptations ...
The evolutionary roots of carnivory in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) stem from a defense res...
The feeding response of Venus flytraps (Dionaea muscipula) is widely studied, and many studies have ...
Because carnivorous plants rely on arthropods as pollinators and prey, they risk consuming would-be ...
Ecological traps occur when rapid environmental change causes animals to actually prefer inferior ha...