What's new
TerraForums - Carnivorous Plant Community

Welcome to TerraForums — a long-running carnivorous plant community established in 2001. Register for free to join the conversation, ask questions, and connect with growers from around the world.

Sundews on speed

I have a small (but incredibly fast growing) colony of D. burmannii in a fish bowl terrarium, just chillin' under a single 23 watt compact flourescent bulb, lovin' every second of it. Before I continue, you must understand that the reason I pursued getting this plant into my collection is because of its alleged super-quick moving tentacles. Until this point, the plants have been too small to feed. Very recently I decided that they were big enough to start feeding...FEED ME SEYMOUR! FEED ME NOW!

...Sorry, I got carried away there. I think I played "Little Shop of Horrors" one too many times
smile_n_32.gif
Anyways, I decide to feed my little sundews some bugs, and...how do I say this...WOW! You can actually see the tentacles move in towards the prey, and it's not slow. Just amazing to see in action. Here I was thinking that D. scorpiodes was the fastest in my collection. Boy was I wrong! Yes, that plant is very fast at overpowering an insect, but I think it comes in at a close second to D. burmannii.

Dang, just when I think I have a permanent favorite sundew, one of my other sundews comes along and does something incredible like this. Ah, the rough life of a CP grower
smilie4.gif
 
I think I'll have to try getting some of those... burmanii seems to be so popular around here...
 
[b said:
Quote[/b] ]How big does burmanii have to be before it can be fed?

I think my plants were around a month to a month and a half old when I started feeding them. I'm sure you can feed them before that, but the bugs would have to be VERY small.
 
Yeah they are quick. Whenever I feed my seelings a bloodworm/fish food meal, within minuets the leaves are completly folded.

-Rail
 
I use Tetrafin Goldfish Flakes, I figure you could use anything. But I saw much more of a reaction by mixing it with bloodworms and crushing it all to a powder. My seedling D. Capensis absolutly LOVE it. I get new, larger leaves the day after feeding every time.

-Rail
 
In my experience D. burmannii acts more like an annual where after flowering it usually dies and then I grow again from seed. But, this has only been a couple years of growing, not enough to say that it is the "norm" for burmannii.
 
Back
Top