Selective insectivory in Nymphaea nouchali Burm. f.

  • Tetali P
  • Sutar S
  • Tetali S
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Abstract

Carnivorous plants comprise roughly 0.24 percent of the flowering plants, or 640 species represented in 12 families. Yet they are regarded as miracula naturae . Over fifty percent of these taxa are represented in a single family, namely Lentibulariaceae. Carnivorous plants are generally insectivorous, and carnivory in flowering plants is generally found in taxa that are adapted to nutrient-deficient habitats. The extra nutrients such plants acquire by special ways serve merely as supplements. The origin and evolution of carnivorous plants is a mystery in the phylogenetic tree of angiosperms, they often appear without a clear linkage. Here, we report that Nymphaea nouchali Burm. f. (a cultivar of var. cernua), a large aquatic member of the family Nymphaeaceae, indulges in a primitive form of insectivory and represents the missing evolutionary link. To the best of our knowledge, an insectivorous flower was not reported in flowering plants before.

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Tetali, P., Sutar, S., & Tetali, S. (2008). Selective insectivory in Nymphaea nouchali Burm. f. Nature Precedings. https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2008.1817.1

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