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Flower of the California Pitcher Plant

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The flowers of the California pitcher plant open downward unlike many other species of our native pitcher plants, and this is believed to to keep water out, while allowing pollinators in. Wet flowers tend not to get pollinated. This makes sense as they are native to Northern California and Southern Oregon and if there's one thing the Pacific Northwest gets, it's a lot of rain. These were found growing in a peat bog in rural Josephine County, Oregon near the California border.

Copyright
©2018
Image Size
4912x7360 / 28.0MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Angiosperms, Asterids, California pitcher, California pitcher plant, California pitcherplant, D. californica, Darlingtonia, Darlingtonia californica, Eight Dollar Mountain, Ericales, Eudicots, Josephine County, Oregon, PNW, Pacific Northwest, Plantae, Sarraceniaceae, Selma, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, carnivore, carnivorous plant, cobra lily, cobra plant, color, field, flora, flower, flowers, native, natural, nature, pitfall, plant, plants, spring, wild, wildflower, wildflowers
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Pitcher Plants
The flowers of the California pitcher plant open downward unlike many other species of our native pitcher plants, and this is believed to to keep water out, while allowing pollinators in. Wet flowers tend not to get pollinated. This makes sense as they are native to Northern California and Southern Oregon and if there's one thing the Pacific Northwest gets, it's a lot of rain. These were found growing in a peat bog in rural Josephine County, Oregon near the California border.