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. 2018 Apr;191(4):539-546.
doi: 10.1086/696124. Epub 2018 Feb 5.

Venus Flytrap Rarely Traps Its Pollinators

Venus Flytrap Rarely Traps Its Pollinators

Elsa Youngsteadt et al. Am Nat. 2018 Apr.

Abstract

Because carnivorous plants rely on arthropods as pollinators and prey, they risk consuming would-be mutualists. We examined this potential conflict in the Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula), whose pollinators were previously unknown. Diverse arthropods from two classes and nine orders visited flowers; 56% of visitors carried D. muscipula pollen, often mixed with pollen of coflowering species. Within this diverse, generalized community, certain bee and beetle species appear to be the most important pollinators, on the basis of their abundance, pollen load size, and pollen fidelity. Dionaea muscipula prey spanned four invertebrate classes and 11 orders; spiders, beetles, and ants were most common. At the family and species levels, few taxa were shared between traps and flowers, yielding a near-zero value of niche overlap for these potentially competing structures. Spatial separation of traps and flowers may contribute to partitioning the invertebrate community between nutritional and reproductive functions in D. muscipula.

Keywords: Dionaea muscipula; Venus flytrap; niche overlap; pollination ecology; pollinator-prey conflict.

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