Bananas.org

Welcome to the Bananas.org forums.

You're currently viewing our message boards as a guest which gives you limited access to participate in discussions and access our other features such as our wiki and photo gallery. By joining our community, you'll have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast and simple, so please join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Go Back   Bananas.org > Other Topics > Tiki Hut
Register Photo Gallery Classifieds Wiki Chat Map Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Tiki Hut All other posts go here. Banana jokes, travel stories, anything else you would like to chat about.


Members currently in the chatroom: 0
The most chatters online in one day was 17, 09-06-2009.
No one is currently using the chat.

Reply   Email this Page Email this Page
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 04-03-2010, 09:14 AM   #1 (permalink)
Love those bananas
 
cherokee_greg's Avatar
 
Location: Fresno,CA
Zone: zone 9
Name: Greg
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 4,357
BananaBucks : 289,009
Feedback: 2 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 8,066 Times
Was Thanked 3,946 Times in 1,665 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 335 Times
Default Poo eating plant

Anyone ever heard of the poo eating plant ? Check this out.
Recent research shows that the giant montane pitcher plant of Borneo -- the largest carnivorous plant in the world -- is designed to eat not small animals, but small-animal droppings. Usually, pitcher plants use their elaborate structures to entice and capture tiny creatures like insects, which are ingested by the plants for their nitrogen and phosphorus. Borneo's humongous Nepenthes raja has long been reputed to prey on local rodents -- but after finding tree-shrew excrement inside the plants, botanists discovered that the plant is actually perfectly evolved to be a tree-shrew toilet. We think this discovery could've been made long ago -- heck, with their fluid-filled bowls and jutting "lids," the plants even look like toilets. The wonders of nature never cease to amaze.

The largest meat-eating plant in the world is designed not to eat small animals, but small animal poo.
Botanists have discovered that the giant montane pitcher plant of Borneo has a pitcher the exact same size as a tree shrew's body.
But it is not this big to swallow up mammals such as tree shrews or rats.
Instead, the pitcher uses tasty nectar to attract tree shrews, then ensures its pitcher is big enough to collect the feeding mammal's droppings.
Details of the discovery are published in the journal New Phytologist.
Big reputation
Pitcher plants have elaborate structures which entice creatures such as ants or spiders into a precarious position, from which they fall into a fluid-filled trap, where they drown and are ingested.
These arthropods are thought to provide the plant with vital nitrogen and phosphorus, which it cannot obtain any other way.
Pitchers are the largest carnivorous plants, and the largest pitchers grow in Borneo.
One, known as Nepenthes rajah, is believed to be the largest meat-eating plant in the world, growing pitchers that can hold two litres of water if filled to the brim.
This plant's pitcher is so big that they are reputed to catch vertebrates.
"This species has always been famous for its ability to trap rodents, but I've been looking at the pitchers of this species on and off since 1987, and I've never seen a trapped rat inside," says Dr Charles Clarke, an expert on carnivorous plants based at Monash University's Sunway Campus in Selangor, Malaysia.
"This made me wonder: if it is large enough to trap rats, but it only traps them very rarely, it is likely that the pitchers are large because of some other reason?"
To find out, Dr Clarke and colleagues Ms Lijin Chin of Monash University and Dr Jonathan Moran of Royal Roads University in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada turned their attention to tree shrews, which inhabit the same forest as N. rajah.
They did so after noticing that tree shrews, which are a similar size to rodents but most closely related to primates, sometimes left faeces in the traps of large pitchers.
"All of a sudden we realised that there may be some relationship between big pitchers and tree shrews," says Dr Clarke.
"So we decided to look at the pitcher geometry."
What they found "totally blew us away", says Dr Clarke.
Precise dimensions
N. rapah pitchers have huge orifices, but they also grow large concave lids held at an angle of about 90 degrees away from the orifice.
The inside of these lids are covered with glands that exude huge amounts of nectar.
Most importantly, the distance from the front of the pitcher's mouth to the glands corresponds exactly to the head to body length of mountain tree shrews.
The same is true for two other species of large meat-eating pitcher plant, N. lowii and N. macrophylla that are also visited by tree shrews.
However, the pattern does not hold for other pitcher species not associated with the small mammals.
"In order for the tree shrews to reach the exudates, they must climb onto the pitchers and orient themselves in such a way that their backsides are located over the pitcher mouths," explains Dr Clarke.
The tree shrews then appear to defecate as a way of marking their feeding territory.
That suggests these supposedly "meat-eating" plants have evolved a mutualistic relationship with tree shrews.
The tree shrews get nectar, a valuable food source, and in return, the plants get to catch and absorb the tree shrew's faeces which likely supplies the majority of nitrogen required by the plant.
These particular species of pitcher also live in the highlands where insects and other arthropods are more scarce.
Such creatures would normally provide the nitrogen needed by the pitcher, forcing it to evolve its huge size to attract tree shrews instead.
Radical rethink
"150 years after the discovery of N. rajah, we finally have an explanation for why the largest carnivorous plant in the world produces such big pitchers," says Dr Clarke.
Dr Clarke says it is the "neatest" discovery he has made in more than 20 years of studying Nepenthes meat-eating plants.
"The findings should radically alter how we look at these plants," he says.
He believes there is much we still have to learn about the true habits of carnivorous plants.
They suspect another highland species, N. ephippiata, likely feeds on faeces too, as may a huge meat-eating plant called N. attenboroughii which was only discovered last year.
In the lowlands of Borneo, bats roost in the pitchers of yet more Nepenthes species, suggesting these plants may too feed off the faeces of other small mammals.
__________________




Greg zone 9 Fresno,CA
http://gardenjot.com/garden/view/1980/Gregs-Banana-Farm

Click for Fresno, California Forecast
cherokee_greg is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To cherokee_greg

Join Bananas.org Today!

Are you a banana plant enthusiast? Then we hope you will join the community. You will gain access to post, create threads, private message, upload images, join groups and more.

Bananas.org is owned and operated by fellow banana plant enthusiasts. We strive to offer a non-commercial community to learn and share information. Receive all three issues from Volume 1 of Bananas Magazine with your membership:
   

Join Bananas.org Today! - Click Here


Sponsors

Old 04-03-2010, 06:00 PM   #2 (permalink)
Happy Growing
 
Abnshrek's Avatar
 
Location: Beaumont Texas
Zone: 8b, but 9b weather..
Name: Migael / Michael
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 9,492
BananaBucks : 196,054
Feedback: 45 / 100%
Said "Thanks" 10,447 Times
Was Thanked 16,440 Times in 5,237 Posts
Said "Welcome to Bananas" 2,318 Times
Default Re: Poo eating plant

That is very interesting Greg.. I know all my plants like poo too!!! :^)
__________________
Click for Haughton, Louisiana Forecast

I'm a Nannerhead :^)
Abnshrek is offline   Reply With Quote Send A Private Message To Abnshrek
Reply   Email this Page Email this Page

Previous Thread: Western US getting screwed
Next Thread: Earthquake





Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
eating the banana plant gadget Banana Recipes 15 09-02-2013 10:35 AM
What the heck am I eating? lorax Main Banana Discussion 20 05-14-2009 08:25 PM
Velutina eating machine Lagniappe Main Banana Discussion 5 06-28-2007 04:38 AM
I just like eating them. dotancohen Member Introductions 13 04-26-2007 10:43 AM
Eating my first bananas baby!!!! doubravsky Main Banana Discussion 7 10-19-2006 06:05 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:17 AM.





All content © Bananas.org & the respective author.