Venus flytraps face loss of habitat
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- aspenlve
- added this
These days, the little plant is more vulnerable than ever. And despite its popularity, the people who could protect it seem focused on other problems.
The flytrap's natural habitat exists only within a hundred miles of the Carolinas' coast, where much larger and more territorial plants have always held forth. Booming growth and development along the coast threatens to overrun the few sensitive and thin populations of venus flytraps that still exist in the wild.
Plants exist in just one county
An Associated Press review of state botany records found that nearly 80 percent of the 117 identified wild populations of flytraps in North Carolina have little chance of surviving, have been wiped out altogether or haven't been seen in years. Most of the viable clusters are in nature preserves, yet experts believe some of those could be thinned by encroaching humans.
"When you go out looking for these populations that have been recorded, you find you're either in a golf course or a subdivision, or a road or a shopping center," said James Luken, a professor at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, S.C., who studies wetland ecology. "It's a biological hotspot, but it's a development hotspot. These areas are being transformed as fast as the bulldozers can roll."
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- groups:
- Green, Earth and Science
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- tags:
- Green, Earth and Science, Environment, Plants, 1 more
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idealist
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o yea we should try and produce these plant in a area were theres lots of flys.... the white house maby? yea that place reaks! sure to be flys there
- 3 years ago
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idealist
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idealist
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This plant is really one of the great spectacles of earth. the carnivor plant... sigh...any one who dosent care will allso be consumed bye the ever conquering "nothing" from the never ending story movie. i beleive that nothing philosophy will be a much more real nightmare real soon. and if you dont care i hope "the nothing" consumes you right after your favorite animal becomes nothing more then sad story.
that or a giant talking wold hunts you down! sucka!! foolish sucka!!! - 3 years ago
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idealist
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BIOHAZARD
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Stupid humans ! killing plants, the nerve !
- 3 years ago
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BIOHAZARD
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oneup
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Is this news?
- 3 years ago
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oneup
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aspenlve
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oneup:
what do you consider news? Might be the first place to start comparing news and olds.
- 3 years ago
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aspenlve
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metalcookiesxy70
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I only seen one, about 9 years ago, yes it will be the end for my favorite plant..
- 3 years ago
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metalcookiesxy70
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super_Che
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OOOOHHH nooo, what ever will we do with out them??? seriously who cares?
- 3 years ago
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super_Che
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aspenlve
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super_Che:
funny, someone's saying the same thing about you right now
- 3 years ago
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aspenlve
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ArtisGilmoreHOF
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I don't know, I'd say Venus Flytrap's habitat has been gone for at least 25 years...
- 3 years ago
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ArtisGilmoreHOF
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Hendrix_Is_God
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I have never seen one in real life, it would a be shame if I never do, It really does make me sad that there are such marvels that I might never see
- 3 years ago
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Hendrix_Is_God
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Wilmingtonian
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I'm from the area where these are grown and years ago they were abundant enough to be sold as tourist souvenirs. But with all the growth to this once secret area I'm afraid what could or would happen to it's habitat. Its a very distinct plant that needs a specific ecosystem and environment to live in.
- 3 years ago
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Wilmingtonian
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bigloutech
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feed me seymour
- 3 years ago
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bigloutech
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HolyCity2012
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bigloutech:
I guess you think this sort of thing is something to laugh at?
- 3 years ago
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HolyCity2012
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HolyCity2012
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When I was kid I could find "fly traps" out in the wild but it has been over 25 years since I have seen one. The same goes for "night hawks" & "horny toads"...
They're all just gone....
- 3 years ago
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HolyCity2012
