coolnweird
Arachnobaron
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2019
- Messages
- 510
Looking good. Although I'd recommend you do make your own thread though like I did as it allows you to follow things better. As in you can see the progress your plants are making quicker as there'll only be your own pics. And it makes things easier to find too.Hope you don't mind me highjacking this thread to show off my carnivorous plants! It's the only thread I found on the topic. Here's a month of growth in my starter bog!
View attachment 388370
Didn't know you grow Pinguicula! Love the close-ups--you really can't tell looking at Pinguicula with naked eyes that it's essentially the same system as Drosersa.The sticky droplets on the leaves of a Pinguicula cyclosecta are a lot smaller than those of a sundew. However there's loads of them over a large surface so they have no trouble catching flies and the like.
View attachment 388493 View attachment 388492
Aye you'd think their leaves just had a sticky coating on them by looking yet they're made up of hundreds/thousands of tiny droplets each in their own perch.Didn't know you grow Pinguicula! Love the close-ups--you really can't tell looking at Pinguicula with naked eyes that it's essentially the same system as Drosersa.
One of these days I'd like to get gypsicola and laueana. I'd also like to see gypsicola in the wild. Had the unexpected pleasure of finding vulgaris near a glacier in Iceland in 2016--really drove home why they're called butterworts.
I think--but can't easily prove--that the tentacles on the bus are there for developmental reasons, not adaptive ones. As in, all Pinguicula leaves and stems start off with tentacles, but on the flowers they disappear later. It could be for protection early on, however.I noticed that newly emerging flowers of the Pinguicula cyclosecta were covered in the same sticky blobs as the the leaves. Not sure if it's for protection, to catch food or both. Carnivorous plants need pollinators so their flowers end up high up well away from the "danger zone". No point killing what you need. As this flower grows those sticky buds will disappear making the flower safe for any visitors.
View attachment 388650 View attachment 388651
With them being able to stop the production of carnivorous leaves in winter I thought they'd be able to stop the tentacles on newly emerged flower buds. But then again that's a seasonal change for the plant not just odd parts.I think--but can't easily prove--that the tentacles on the bus are there for developmental reasons, not adaptive ones. As in, all Pinguicula leaves and stems start off with tentacles, but on the flowers they disappear later. It could be for protection early on, however.
Oh I forgot about that--very good point. But are you sure the succulent leaves don't also begin development with tentacles? If not then I'd have to stick with defense mechanism.With them being able to stop the production of carnivorous leaves in winter I thought they'd be able to stop the tentacles on newly emerged flower buds. But then again that's a seasonal change for the plant not just odd parts.
Cheers.
That's a good point. I don't actually know.Oh I forgot about that--very good point. But are you sure the succulent leaves don't also begin development with tentacles? If not then I'd have to stick with defense mechanism.
Check when it switches over--now I'm really curious.That's a good point. I don't actually know.
I'll forget.Check when it switches over--now I'm really curious.
Maybe don'tI'll forget.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.Maybe don't