Meat-eating plant discovered in the Philippines.

by truthcaster | August 17, 2009 at 06:29 am
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One of the largest meat eating plant is discovered in the Philippines.

Rat-eating plant discovered in Philippines

A carnivorous pitcher plant that eats rats and insects has been discovered in the Philippines and named after Sir David Attenborough.

The plant is among the largest of all pitchers and is believed to be the largest meat-eating shrub, dissolving rats with acid-like enzymes.

The team of botanists, led by British experts Stewart McPherson and Alastair Robinson, found the plant on Mount Victoria in the Philippines.

They were inspired to search for the plant after word that it is existed came from two Christian missionaries who described seeing a large carnivorous pitcher in 2000 after they climbed the mountain.

Mr McPherson, of Poole Dorset, said: "The plant produces spectacular traps which catch not only insects, but also rodents. It is remarkable that it remained undiscovered until the 21st century."

The team, which found the plant in 2007 following a two-month expedition, published details of their discovery in the Botanical Journal of Linnean Society earlier this year following a three-year study of all 120 species of pitcher plant.

They decided to name the plant Nepenthes attenboroughii, after the wildlife broadcaster Sir David.

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Babel-Fish
While they catch mostly insects there where also found small vertebrates, even rats in bigger pitcher. But these are mere accidents for both sides, and the putrefaction of big prey diminishes the pitchers live span. Carnivorous plants should be rather called insect eating plants.

I have seen large pitcher plants in gardens here in the Philippine's though they may not be native, the biggest ones can be found in Borneo, there may of been many here before deforestation of which many varieties may have been lost. When I lived on the Island of Cebu I had my own pitcher plants though none where as big as the find in the mountains mention within the article.   


0
lOv3raku

wow I'm not familiar with it. I'm a little bit surprised! Thank you for sharing this. Now I've got new interesting discovery again.

0
nagba

nice. though at first i've read it as man-eating plant :P

Good old Attenborough. I'm glad they named it after him.

0
truthcaster

man-eating! yeah, that'll be something to report ;)

attenborough voice is stuck in my head! ahhhh!

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Babel-Fish
First Flagged at 2:44 AM, Aug 19, 2009 by Babel-Fish
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