Hooded Pitcher Plant
Found only in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, the hooded pitcher plant is one of the smaller of our native pitcher plants found at the edges of bogs and wet pinelands. Like all carnivorous plants, nectar glands inside the "hood" attract insects where a series of hairs inside the pitcher (a modified leaf) encourages the insect downward into the tube until it cannot turn around and escape. These insects will in turn be dissolved and deliver the essential nutrients that are needed in such a plant that grows in such nutrient-poor soils. This is the blossoming flower that is ironically also pollinated by flying insects. This one was found and photographed during the summer rains in the Osceola National Forest in North Florida.
- Copyright
- ©2010
- Image Size
- 2848x4288 / 5.9MB
- Keywords
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Angiosperms, Asterids, Baker County, Ericales, Eudicots, Florida, Operculum, Osceola National Forest, Plantae, S. minor, Sarracenia, Sarracenia minor, Sarraceniaceae, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, carnivore, carnivorous plant, color, countryside, dicot, field, flora, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, garden, herb, herbaceous, hooded pitcher plant, hooded pitcherplant, macro, native, natural, nature, perennial, pitcher plants, pitcherplant, plant, plants, rhizomatous, spring, summer, terrestrial, wild, wildflower, wildflowers
- Contained in galleries
- Pitcher Plants, Pitcher Plants