Isn't this a pretty yellow flower, floating in a puddle? Don't let your eyes fool you. This is a carnivorous (meat-eating) plant, and scientists think it is one of the fastest bug-eating plants on Earth!Bladderworts eat tiny bugs (smaller than a flea) that live in the water. The plants have bladders (tiny, closed bags) with tiny hairs near the opening of the bag. When a micoscopic bug swims by and brushes against the hairs, the mouth of the bladder pops open, sucks in a gulp of water, and snaps shut, trapping the bug inside! Until recently, we didn't have a way to judge just how quickly this happens. But recently, French and German scientists used high speed cameras to capture the ambush, and discovered that it happens in a millisecond (there are one thousand milliseconds in one second). That makes the Bladderwort one of the fastest plants in the pond. And it looks so innocent!
Published on February 06, 2012 07:32