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Pitcher plants can snare prey, too

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

The carnivorous pitcher plants that feed on insects in the Asian tropics may not snap shut like Venus flytraps, but they are more active than they look.

Rather than being passive pitfall traps, the pitchers of Nepenthes alata plants actually contain a slimy fluid that produces filaments to snare prey, French researchers reported Thursday in the journal Nature.

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