Each modified leaf is solid on the end near the plant, but as it descends into the soil, it hollows out and then forks at a Y junction. The spiralling forks are just 200 micrometers wide inside, and they are covered by a series of traps. But whatever it is these traps have evolved to capture must be vanishingly small. The openings are slits a mere 400 micrometers wide by 180 micrometers long. At the opening of the traps are rows of hairs pointing toward the inside of the plant, as if to prevent the escape of anything so unfortunate as to find itself inside. There are also numerous glands.
Since the mid-19th century, people have suggested that this plant might be carnivorous and the suspicious slits traps. But insect remains were rarely found inside. Few insects could fit inside anyway. That left a surprising possibility: sets traps to catch single-celled microorganisms called .
Pleurozia purpurea36373 580 360” by Matt von Konrat Ph.D – Biblioteca Digital Mundial (eol.org). Licensed under via .
already start out as funky and interesting plants. Along with mosses and hornworts, these plants attained their present form longer ago than any other land plants. They have retained many of the ancestral features they inherited from their green algal ancestors like swimming sperm, spores, and relatively simple bodies that most of the rest of land plants lost long ago.
But they added some new features as well: their reproductive structures can be flamboyant by the standards of any plant. The liverwort makes three such structures — that get launched by wayward raindrops to greener pastures. Other liverworts’ reproductive structures aren’t quite so outlandish, but you get the idea. In addition, is unique among liverworts in its maroon color; most are a sedate green. So a red liverwort with a taste for prey seems like an especially delightful little package.
also makes traps, and the traps in question seem to have evolved from what amount to cisterns. Also found in several other liverwort lineages, these little sacs are normally used for storing water. They are usually lidless. But in and another genus called , they have transparent, hinged lids. The lids of Pleurozia’s traps open only inward, and are larger than the opening they block to prevent them from swinging outward. Once something slips past the one-way door, there is no escape. They look suspiciously like the insect traps of the flowering plant :
86% of the water sacs contained ciliates 30 minutes later. One had caught 11. Several hours later, the sacs were stuffed with as many as 16 . Not a single ciliate escaped.
Unlike , doesn’t appear to have glands that secrete chemical attractants or digestive enzymes. The “bait” for these traps may be the natural community of bacteria that live on the surface of the plants. In other experiments, americana was observed feeding on bacteria by moving around plants “like a vacuum cleaner”, and bacteria are frequently seen on the surfaces of liverworts in scanning electron micrographs.
What was perhaps most amazing about these experiments was the variety of creatures that showed up in the liverwort traps in plants from both in captivity and in the wild: , , , , , , , and . The sacs also often appeared full of schmutz, which the scientists interpreted as the decaying remains of the creatures caught in the traps.
So, they conclude, we can only call these plants zoophagous and not carnivorous because we are not 100% sure they are actually eating what they catch. The authors suggest that this can hardly be avoided, though, even if the plant produces no digestive enzymes. Little captured animals die and rot with the help of bacteria; deceased protists actually explode (due to the shut-down of their , which when running act like bilge pumps to expel water constantly taken aboard due to ) and literally spill their guts into the trap. The nutrients are sitting there for the taking, even by passive pick-up. Still, all we have here is what prosecutors with thick southern drawls like to call .
While spotlight-hogging Venus Fly-Traps grab all the lurid glory, low-profile carnivorous plants like these two quietly trap protists and animals in tiny or underground chambers, and there are probably more species that do this yet undiscovered. But focusing on small game rather than large might offer an advantage: although the protist-traps of wild and brim with victims, the insect snares of , , and in the wild are only rarely observed to contain an actual fly. Perhaps it’s not the size of the prey but the size of the catch that really matters.
Barthlott W., Porembski S., Fischer E. & Gemmel B. (1998). First Protozoa-trapping Plant Found, Nature, 392
Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
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