Carnivorous Plants and their Habitats, Volume 2
Stewart McPherson, Andreas Fleischmann and Alastair Robinson
719 pages, 425 photographs.
- Description
- Images (7)
- Contents
- Write a review
Carnivorous plants are the most unusual of all flowering plants. So called because they have evolved the unique ability to attract, trap, kill and
digest insects and other small animals. These plants turn the tables of the natural world and prey on fauna in order to augment nutrients that are
otherwise not available in the often harsh and extreme habitats in which they grow. This work examines the wild ecology and natural diversity of all
known genera of carnivorous plants and examines the remarkable and often spectacular means by which they trap and kill animal prey.
Volume two covers genus accounts of the Sticky-Leaved Insect Plants, Corkscrew Plants and Bladderworts, including Triphyophyllum, Drosera, Drosophyllum, Roridula, Byblis, Pinguicula, Ibicella and Proboscidea, Philcoxia, Genlisea, and Utricularia and concluding chapters.
Volume two covers genus accounts of the Sticky-Leaved Insect Plants, Corkscrew Plants and Bladderworts, including Triphyophyllum, Drosera, Drosophyllum, Roridula, Byblis, Pinguicula, Ibicella and Proboscidea, Philcoxia, Genlisea, and Utricularia and concluding chapters.
Other titles in related subjects:
Other products from the same publisher
related organisations include:
British Cactus & Succulent Society
Cactus & Co International Society
If you are involved in a scientific, conservation or environmental organisation and would like to be listed, please see our NHBS-Xchange information page.
Subject







