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Utricularia volubilis is a wonderfull annual plant. This
submerged aquatic species from Southwestern Australia
represents a botanical rarity.
It bears large violet flowers on twining scapes to 90 cm.
Its filamentous leaves can be up to 30 cm long and its
pigmented traps up to 5 mm large. The large traps can be
seen on short stalks attached to the rosette. Traps are
often held on the tips of some of the grass like leaves.
Both of these types of traps are suspended in the water.
The largest traps of all are attached to the underground
stolons and trap preys which live in this substrate.
The bladder-trap is unique to the Utricularia, giving
them their nickname of Bladderwort. Utricularia has no
true root system. They form creeping or floating, thin,
hair-like stems that extended away from the main body of
the plant. The bladder-traps are held on these stems. The
traps are underground and are too small to hand feed. So,
it has to catch it's own microscopic prey. Thin, filament-like
hairs protrude from the trap door. These serve as guides
to send the prey toward the door. These plants use low
pressure inside the chamber vs. high pressure outside.
When a bug activates the hairs, the door opens quickly,
forcing the victim into the low-pressure digestion area.
The water is pumped out and the mulcilage seal is re-established.
The plant now secrets digestive juices to break down the
captured prey and absorb the mineral rich fluid. Trapping
usually occurs within 1/50 of a second. It is believed
that glands found around the closed entry may also
secrete an attractant that may aid in luring prey.
Hardiness zone 11, (4°C/40°F) in Winter. Optimum
temperatures are 18-26 °C, it can tolerate 5 °C. The
species prefers slight shading. In captivity, they grow
well in a standard 1:1 peat moss/sand mix. Like other
carnivorous plants, they do require pure water and can be
killed by fertilizer in the soil. It grows in deep water.
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