carnivoras
Carnivoras is a term used to describe carnivorous plants, a diverse group of flowering plants that obtain essential nutrients by trapping and digesting animal prey, typically insects and other small organisms. They commonly inhabit nutrient-poor soils in bogs, wetlands, savannas, and tropical forests, where nitrogen and phosphorus are scarce. To supplement photosynthesis, they have evolved specialized trapping structures vulnerable to prey: pitfall traps in temperate and tropical pitcher plants (Nepenthes, Sarracenia, Cephalotus), snap traps in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) and related species (Aldrovanda), sticky flypaper traps in sundews (Drosera) and butterworts (Pinguicula), and suction traps in bladderworts (Utricularia). These traps lure, capture, and retain prey, enabling digestion by a combination of plant enzymes and, in some cases, symbiotic microorganisms.
Digestive processes release nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus absorbed through the plant’s tissues, supporting growth
Distribution varies widely by genus, with temperate carnivorous flora in North America and Europe, and tropical
Cultivation is popular in horticulture, requiring bright light, acidic soil mixes with low mineral content, ample