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Giant rat-eating plant discovered

O_O Check out this giant pitcher plant from the Phillipines.

You've heard of venus flytraps? Regular pitcher plants? Small fry compared to this behemoth. Nepenthes attenboroughii (named after Sir David Attenborough) is way bigger than those relatively tame plants, and dissolves its prey with "acid-like enzymes".

From the article: "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."

>Whimper<

Call me cowardly, but I get the willies when we start discovering plants that can eat small rodents...who knows what else is out there in the as-yet-unexplored areas of the jungle...

Link

rat-plant_1463666f.jpg
35 comments
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Aug 18, 2009. 9:18 AMlaxman735 says:
Holy crap, but I don't think its real
Aug 21, 2009. 9:49 AMkelseymh says:
It's real. Read the comments. However, the picture Lithium used (which she got from the Telegraph) is either a fake, or just not relevant.
Aug 17, 2009. 5:16 PMUncle Kudzu says:
scary, if it's real! good thing we're rapidly destroying all the wild places on the planet; who'd want to stumble into a patch of those things?!
Aug 20, 2009. 7:12 PM~Aeronous~ says:
lolz, your'e not alone...
Aug 18, 2009. 9:35 PMUncle Kudzu says:
i was going for a kind of gallows sarcasm, LR.
Aug 17, 2009. 5:25 PMRock Soldier says:
Your post, or his post with the green avatar?
Aug 18, 2009. 8:53 PMD.L.H. says:
That is just to weird
Aug 18, 2009. 5:17 PMknexsuperbuilderfreak says:
ahhhhhhhhh dont eat me
Aug 18, 2009. 1:34 PMRavenShadow519 says:
Aug 18, 2009. 7:10 AMGoodhart says:
In any case, just don't step in it ;-)
Aug 17, 2009. 11:24 PMlemonie says:
One of these guys was on the radio this morning. He explained that some missionaries had climbed this mountain to install a radio-repeater, got stuck for 13 days, had to be choppered-off. But they'd mentioned these giant carnivorous plants, which is why these guys went up there. He said 2nd largest, about a metre in diameter with the pitchers at the ends of the leaves. He didn't say that they'd seen / photographed a rat in there, but that this sometimes happens. L
Aug 17, 2009. 1:05 PMkelseymh says:
Feed me, Seymour, feed me all night long...
Aug 17, 2009. 11:09 PMarylic says:
Here....nepy nepy nepy...come get you tender juicy rats here.....!
Aug 17, 2009. 2:26 PMKiteman says:
...you beat me to the quote!
Aug 17, 2009. 11:09 PMarylic says:
You beat me to the quotes tooo...
Aug 17, 2009. 7:00 PMGjdj3 says:
Little Shop of Horrors!

Aug 17, 2009. 2:21 PMjeff-o says:
I'm suspicious of that photo - it looks 'shopped.
Aug 17, 2009. 2:32 PMkelseymh says:
I am on your side, Jeff-o. The descriptive journal article (and Wikipedia) doesn't mention carnivory (of rodents or anything else). The few non-sensational reports I can find describe it as "large enough" to eat a rat, but none of the pictures are consistent with the Daily Mail's.
Aug 17, 2009. 2:37 PMlemonie says:
The link is to the Telegraph, but they probably got it from the same news agency / other source (perhaps the Mail even?) L
Aug 17, 2009. 5:44 PMTool Using Animal says:
Not only is it probably a shop, but it 's not even the right plant, that looks like N. rafflesiana. But it is definitely not the plant pictured in Kelseys JLS article.
Aug 17, 2009. 6:42 PMTool Using Animal says:
If you compare the two, you see that the lids are substantially different, one nearly covers the opening of the pitcher, one is small and held in a position that does not cover the pitcher. One is blader shaped, one trumpet. One the opening is nearly transverse, the other the opening is at an acute tangent. etc etc.
Aug 17, 2009. 5:56 PMTool Using Animal says:
And just for fun, here is my late N.coccinea "eating" a treefrog.
Aug 17, 2009. 7:13 PMjeff-o says:
Yeah, it was the cute little rat poking its head out the top that made me cry 'foul.'
Aug 17, 2009. 8:55 PMTool Using Animal says:
Yes, and searching based on the photography credit, I found that it is the same pitcher, at a slightly different angle that he used on the cover of one of his books. and as you can see, no mouse is visible.
Aug 18, 2009. 3:36 AMjeff-o says:
Nice sleuthing!
Aug 17, 2009. 2:24 PMkelseymh says:
Here's the orginal article from JLS with the description and naming.
Aug 17, 2009. 2:43 PMXenophile says:
We need more carnivorous plant articles and ibles, cause I'm a big fan of them plants!
Aug 17, 2009. 12:36 PMlemonie says:
Strange how UK based newspapers seem to be the hardest to load for me... People often use "acid-like" because acid is something generally understood to dissolve things. But I believe the enzymes act in a basic-fashion, (or possibly both at the same time). L

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