In spite of the recent improvements in the understanding of carnivorous plants' biology, some questions have remained unanswered. In this study, the segregation of food niches (i.e. specialization on different categories of prey) for three sympatric carnivorous temperate Drosera species with different shapes of trapping leaves is tested. Potentially available prey was also taken into account, by using artificial traps. Almost all the prey trapped by the three Drosera species and by passive traps belonged to four insect orders: Diptera, Hymenoptera, Coleoptera, Homoptera, as well as Araneae. Diptera specimens were the main prey for all the species. This study demonstrates that arthropods caught by the three temperate sympatric sundew species (D. rotundifolia, D. obovata and D. anglica), belong to the same orders. The proportions of prey from different orders, caught by different sundew species did not differ significantly. The result does not necessarily imply the absence of interspecific competition for prey: arthropods were identified only to order, and competition may have resulted in specialization on prey taxa of lower rank. © 2010 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Volkova, P. A., Sukhov, N. D., & Petrov, P. N. (2010). Three carnivorous plant species (Drosera spp.) in European Russia: Peaceful coexistence? Nordic Journal of Botany, 28(4), 409–412. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1756-1051.2010.00847.x
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