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Monday, May 16, 2016

Most interesting plants

Top 20 Most Interesting Plants of the World

Introduction

I had some success with my article about the world’s ten most interesting animals, so I decided I should do plants too. After all, plants have a reputation for being motionless and boring, but many of them are neither. These 20 plants challenge the mundane stereotype that plagues their kingdom. (Okay, technically some are fungi, so I cheated a little.) Hope you enjoy!

1. Corpse Flower, Titan Arum

Not only is it ugly, it smells like a corpse. Luckily only 28 have bloomed in the United States.
Not only is it ugly, it smells like a corpse. Luckily only 28 have bloomed in the United States. | Source
Amorphophallus titanum
The Corpse Flower smells strongly like a rotting corpse, and it looks like it belongs in the movie Avatar. I would imagine that the smell helps prevent it from being eaten, but despite this the plant is still very rare; according to the IUCN it’s officially “threatened." It comes from the forests of Sumatra. It's not actually one big flower; it’s thousands upon thousands of little male and female flowers. These exude oils, while the center collects heat. The heat plus the oils create the smell that attracts the beetles that pollinate the flower. In case you were wondering, a mature plant can weigh 200 pounds.

2. Elephant-Foot Yam

Amorphophallus (Elephant-Foot Yam) with flies
Amorphophallus (Elephant-Foot Yam) with flies | Source
Amorphophallus paeoniifolius
Guess who this cute little guy is related to? Yep, the Corpse Flower. Not only are they related, they also share many characteristics. For example this guy also smells like a corpse. These elephant-foot yams vary in color, as well. Some are pure white.
The Elephant-Foot Yam might have the edge on the Corpse Flower in wackiness because it is edible. In one Southeast Asian culture they are grown as a delicacy, while in another they are a last-resort food source.

3. Rafflesia: Another "Corpse Flower"

Rafflesia arnoldii, the world's biggest flower
Rafflesia arnoldii, the world's biggest flower | Source
Rafflesia arnoldii
Rafflesia is another "corpse flower" because of its stench (I promise this is the last plant here that smells like a corpse). It's unique in that it is the world’s largest single flower. It is also wacky because it has no stems, leaves, or roots, though it does seem to be a plant of some kind. Some think it’s related to fungi. The Kew Botanical Gardens website puts it in Class Equisetopsia, related to horsetails, but Wikipedia puts in Malphigiales (a large category including willows and flaxes).
Want to find one so you can plant it in your backyard? Me too. However these are extremely hard to find. They live most of their lives as inconspicuous strands of tissue, parasitic on Tetrastigma vines in tropical rainforests, until the strands develop a little inconspicuous bud, which for a few brief days explosively transforms into the thing above.

4. Venus Flytrap

Flies, will you ever learn?  Do NOT go near the plant with jaws!
Flies, will you ever learn? Do NOT go near the plant with jaws! | Source
Dionaea muscipula
It's carnivorous. Not many plants eat things other than sunlight (though you'll see a few in the list below). And even fewer (about four species) are capable of rapid movement. This makes the Venus Flytrap seem like, I don't know, it might be from another planet or something. Actually it’s from boggy areas of North and South Carolina, where the soil is poor in nutrients. It craves a high-nitrogen snack once in a while.
You might wonder how the trap is triggered. Well, with trigger hairs. When two hairs are touched within 20 seconds of each other, or if a single hair is touched twice, the trap snaps shut. Healthier Venus Flytraps close quicker. Scientists are unsure about the mechanism; it has to do with neighboring cells sending chemical messages to each other.
The jaw-looking things act like interlocking fingers, or to the insect inside, prison bars. They do their best to restrain the insect from escaping. Then the rest is done with digestive juices. Read even more about Venus Flytraps from the Botanical Society of America.

5. Tropical Pitcher Plants

Nepenthese edwardsiana
Nepenthese edwardsiana | Source
Nepenthes species
What is it? Monkeys have been spotted drinking from it. Rats have been spotted partially digested in it, and some other stuff too (no, it doesn't smell like a corpse). About 150 species are known, mostly from the forests of Sumatra, Borneo, and the Philippines.
The diet of a tropical pitcher plant includes just about anything that can fit into its pouch of sticky sap, including lizards, termites, spiders, and worms, though it seems to prefer smaller insects. The individual species have complex relationships with their ecosystems. One has evolved to host colonies of carpenter ants to clean up the leftovers from the larger carcasses, which if left lying around in the plant would lead to putrid conditions (we wouldn't want that). Some Nepenthes have evolved into toilet bowls for tree shrews, providing a shrew-sized perch and sweet exudate to attract shrews while they do their business. These plants get the bulk of their nitrogen from the tree-shrew dung they collect. Sound like I'm making this all up? I'm not.

6. Cape Sundew

Another carnivore
Another carnivore | Source
Drosera capensis
There are more carnivorous plants out there than you probably realized (more than I realized, anyway). The Cape Sundew, native to South Africa, traps insects not with rapid movements or weird pitcher-shaped appendages, but instead by slowly wrapping its “arms” (its sticky, sap-covered leaves) around its prey. This is slow, on the average about 30 minutes, and probably fairly cruel.
This is also the first plant on the list that is very good at reproducing. It reseeds easily and can survive a wide range of temperatures. It is on New Zealand’s list of invasive plant pests.

7. Strangler Fig

Strangler Fig, probably the biggest asshole plant on Earth
Strangler Fig, probably the biggest asshole plant on Earth | Source
Ficus (several tropical and subtropical species)
The Strangler Fig is the biggest mooch of the plant kingdom. Not only does it mooch, it kills. There are many different species of Strangler Fig, but they all are basically the same thing: that roommate who steals all of your food. Or that guy at a party who steals all of your beer. Or that guy in class who copied your homework and got a better grade. Only he kills you (could be a her, I'm not sure). Anyway, they are dispersed usually by hitch-hiking on birds and being dropped on the canopy of trees of a dense forest. They are wacky because they will grow up and down. Down so their roots can rob the living tree of all its nutrients, and up for sunlight. They often outlive the host tree by years, sometimes forming hollow cores that house the spirit of the old tree.

8. Bear's-Head Tooth Mushroom

The creativity of Mother Nature...
The creativity of Mother Nature... | Source
Hericium americanum
Well just look at it. That's a mushroom. If you're not convinced that it should be on this list ... it also fights cancer, stimulates nerve growth, and helps kill roundworms. How do we know? Well some really brave soul found out it was edible. Cydro still wouldn't put it on his sandwiches no matter what it does.
Oh yeah, it can grow branches too. I'm not sure how they came up with the name Bear's-Head Tooth Mushroom though. Looks more like a brand new mop to me.

9: Witches' Butter

It must have been a triple dog dare to make the first person eat that.
It must have been a triple dog dare to make the first person eat that. | Source
Tremella mesenterica
Sticking with edible fungi that look inedible, here is Witches' Butter. It has been given other pleasant names such as yellow brain and golden jelly fungus.
Well, I thought it looked funny. It also reproduces by both sexual and asexual production. If you do happen to try to eat it, you'll find that it has no flavor. Witches' butter is currently being studied because of unique biological processes that it undergoes. Some believe that they will prove to have health benefits. It grows on recently fallen and dead trees. It’s parasitic on other fungi, a nice niche.

10: Hammer Orchid

Basically a wasp sex toy
Basically a wasp sex toy | Source
Drakaea glyptodon
This endangered orchid from western Australia gets pollinated in a unique way. Does that red thing on the side look like it belongs there? And what's that black thing on top of the red thing? Well, you'll find this appendage on all of the Drakaea glyptodon that you come across.
Female thynnid wasps happen to be flightless. They also happen to climb on top of plants to signal to the male wasps, who can fly. The male picks them up and does his thing to reproduce with them during flight. The Drakaea glyptodon mimicks the female thynnid wasp's body. The male wasp, being a dumb horny guy, tries to pick up the fake female wasp and instead gets pitched into a mass of pollen. To actually finish pollinating a plant and keep this orchid species going, he has to come in contact with yet another Drakea glyptodon and try to mate with it. So he has to be fooled twice. Now you know how they came up with which was the male and which was the female.
Also, the plant smells like "raw meat." It kind of looks like it, too.

11. Silver Torch Cactus

Uhem.  What are those things?
Uhem. What are those things? | Source
Cleistocactus strausii
The Silver Torch Cactus is wooly, but that isn't unusual; it grows flowers, but that isn't too unusual. Although the way the flowers are shaped is is unusual (yes those are flowers), other cacti bloom kind of like this, just not as horizontally.
But it does have a cool name, and it is a very unusual cactus in that it prefers cold temperatures. It lives in the high mountains of Bolivia and Argentina and can stand frosts of up to minus 10 degrees Celsius.

12. Dragon's-Blood Tree

Looks like it should be in a dinosaur movie
Looks like it should be in a dinosaur movie | Source
Dracaena cinnabari
Man, I wish I had a name like that. “The Dragon's-Blood Guy.” I can see it now. The Dragon's-Blood Tree is one of the coolest-looking trees ever. Its sap resembles dragons' blood; it’s a deep red, even when dried into resin. It was prized among the ancients. It can be used for stimulants, and for toothpaste, of all things. Luckily it survived thousands of years of everyone trying to collect it, which is saying a lot since it is only found on the island of Socotra. The species is a remnant of a subtropical forest ecosystem that used to stretch across North Africa until the desert took over there.
The canopy looks like an umbrella and acts like one; it shades the roots and reduces evaporation. The trees tend to bunch together, because the shade collects what slight dampness there is on Socotra (which gets 10 inches of rain a year) and helps seedlings grow.

13: Welwitschia

You wouldn't look much better if you were that old and spent your entire life in the desert.
You wouldn't look much better if you were that old and spent your entire life in the desert. | Source
Welwitschia mirabilis
Also called “tumbo”and “tweeblaarkanniedood,” Welwitschia is a living fossil found in the deserts of Namibia and Angola. Its close relatives have gone extinct and its distant relatives include pines, spruces, larches, and firs. It has one very short trunk and two leaves—only two. It grows only two leaves no matter how mature it is.
Oh yeah, and carbon dating tells us they live from 400 to 1500 or even 2000 years! So the one above will probably be alive when your great-great-great grand kids are alive. That is assuming no apocalypses happen, although I'd bet these guys could get through an apocalypse much better than we could.

14. Hydnora

Kind of pretty, maybe?
Kind of pretty, maybe? | Source
Hydnora africana
This plant looks like it might belong on a fictional planet in a sci-fi movie, except that no viewer would find it believable for a moment. The Hydnora grows completely underground except for the flower (“flower!”) which is shaped to maximize the efficiency of its bristles in directing beetles to its unpleasant center.
And why would beetles want to go near that? Well, because it smells like feces. Many an entranced dung beetle has been lured into its depths. I know what you’re thinking: Cydro, will you lay off with the carnivorous plants? Don't worry, it doesn't eat the beetles. It just keeps them. It traps them until the flower is completely mature, and then releases all the beetles to go forth into the world and pollinate and reproduce. The male and female Hydnoras have different receptors for this pollination, so the beetles have to come across another Hydnora for the scheme to work.
Does this lovely thing, once pollinated, bear fruit? Why, yes; the fruit takes two years to mature underground, is said to be similar in taste and texture to a potato, yet useful for tanning leather and preserving fishnets.
Wolffia arrhiza. Eeny weeny, aren't they?
Wolffia arrhiza. Eeny weeny, aren't they? | Source
Wolffia species
Wow, they're small! In fact, they're the world's smallest flowering plant! How small are they? Well...
1. FInd an "o" on this page
2. Imagine two specks inside that "o." Two adult Wolffias could fit inside of that "o"! Also, if you looked back in 30-36 hours, there might be four of them! They reproduce really fast. One more thing: they don't have leaves, stems, or roots, though they sometimes sport a tiny flower with one stamen and one pistil.
If you've been to a pond or a river on any continent there's a decent chance you've encountered them, perhaps under the name "duckweed." Several Asian species are skimmed off the water and eaten, or fed to animals; they are 40% protein.

16. Lithops

That's a plant?
That's a plant? | Source
Lithops species
Some plants use toxins to avoid being eaten. Some use thorns. A Lithops survives by pretending to be a rock. If you're into picking up rocks in southern Africa, chances are you'll pick up one of these two-leafed plants. There are dozens of species, each generally preferring a certain type of rock to hide among. In a drought they may shrink down below the ground surface, using their translucent top coating to collect any light that filters through the gravel.
They are fun plants to grow, and if carefully tended, may reward you with a yellow or white daisy-like flower.

Awww ... Cute!

17. Victoria Amazonica

Who put that baby there!?!?
Who put that baby there!?!? | Source
Victoria amazonica
Kew Gardens, the Victorian plant museum, has a proud collection of these water lilies. The leaves grow up to three meters across! The edges bend up to avoid overlapping with their neighbors, and the undersides are thorny to protect against being eaten. A mature lily pad can support an evenly distributed load of 45 kilograms, or, apparently, a baby.
Their flowers are huge and beautiful, and can only be seen at night. On the first night, the flowers are white, female. and fragrant, and trap beetles inside themselves; on the second night they are pink, unscented, and male, and let the beetles loose, dusted with pollen, to seek a fragrant white female flower open for its own first night. If you see the flowers at daybreak, you can watch them close up rather quickly.

18. Dragon Arum

Source
Dracunculus vulgaris
I know I promised not to mention any more plants that smell like a corpse. But this yard-long flower-thingie only smells for a day, and it’s just a “a nauseous dungy rotten meaty odor,” so does that count? As you might guess, it smells in order to attract flies to pollinate it. This stinker is different because it is found in southern Europe, not Southeast Asia.
It is poisonous as well. So look, don't touch!

19. African Acacia

Looking innocent is the only thing it does better than killing herbivores.
Looking innocent is the only thing it does better than killing herbivores.
Acacia (now Vachellia) species
An acacia on a plain looks so innocent, the classic image of the African savannah. I think I saw it on The Lion King. Well, the tree is a mass murderer. If an African Acacia tree is under attack by a grazing animal, say a kudu, it releases a cloud of ethylene gas, thus warning trees up to 50 yards downwind to produce extra tannin in their leaves, making them toxic.
Zoologist Wouter Van Hoven figured this out when he was asked to investigate the sudden death of some 3000 kudu antelope on game ranches in the Transvaal. Observing the grazing activity of animals in the area, he noticed that the giraffes, who were free to roam and pick the trees they ate, ate only certain acacia trees, about one out of ten, and avoided acacia trees that were downwind of others. The kudu, on the other hand, who were fenced in on game ranches, had little to eat in the winter but acacia leaves, and thus ate toxic leaves until they died. The trees killed the kudu by communicating with each other.
Besides using gas, toxins, and thorns to defend themselves, acacias often hire an army of ant bodyguards. The trees provide housing and nectar for the ant, and the biting ants attack whatever comes near the tree. The plant does need herbivores to help propagate it, however, so the ants can’t be too efficient in chasing away all grazers and pollinators. Thus acacias have some complicated three-way relationships.

20. Bladderwort

Source
Utricularia species
Bladderworts are found in tropical and temperate ponds all over the world. What makes them at all interesting? Well, they are submersible floating carnivores. They use little air sacs to float when they are blooming, and then when it's not blooming time they drift underwater like seasonal submarines.
They eat tiny little invertebrates that they suck into their bladders with a vacuum. Beat that, Venus Flytrap. Tiny fish have also been known to trigger the trap.
They are good at surviving just about anywhere (unlike most carnivorous plants). In some places in the United States they have become a pest and humans are trying to get rid of them.
What happens when one floats into the bank of a pond? Well, it will attach itself to the side by extending little needle-like stems. Who knew a plant could resemble a Swiss Army knife so much?

Bonus for Reading This Far! World's Largest and Oldest Trees

Check out a few record-breakers below.

World's Largest Single-Stem Tree: "General Sherman" Giant Sequoia

"General Sherman" tree
"General Sherman" tree | Source
Sequoiadendron giganteum
Not the tallest nor the broadest tree in the world, but the biggest living single tree in volume, the General Sherman tree is a giant sequoia 275 feet tall (almost the length of a football field). It weighs about 1,800 tons (3,600,000 pounds), and is wide enough that a school bus could be driven through its trunk. But it is much smaller than the largest tree ever recorded, a Coast Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) that fell over in 1905 and weighed 3,300 tons. Wow! These trees, of course, have no natural predators.

World's Largest Tree By Area and Volume: Pando, the Quaking Aspen

Fish Lake in Southern Utah.  The Pando quaking aspen colony is within a mile of Fish Lake; these trunks may be part of Pando.
Fish Lake in Southern Utah. The Pando quaking aspen colony is within a mile of Fish Lake; these trunks may be part of Pando. | Source
Populus tremuloides
The Pando tree, an aspen in southern Utah with over 40,000 genetically identical trunks and a shared root system, covers an area of 106 acres, weighs almost 6000 tons, and is thought to be 80,000 years old, having survived multiple ice ages and fires.

King's Holly: An Ancient Sterile Clone

A cutting of King's Holly, growing in the Hobart Botanical Gardens
A cutting of King's Holly, growing in the Hobart Botanical Gardens | Source
Lomatia tasmanica
Not really a holly, but related to proteas and macadamia nuts, and named for a botanist named King. A single colony survives in the wild, 500 individuals in the southwest corner of Tasmania.
How old is the King's Holly plant? Take a deep breath and guess. 400 years? 4,000 years? 40,000 years?
At least 43,600 years, actually. It doesn't have a male or female part, or pollinate; it can't reproduce sexually because it has three sets of chromosomes. It survives by dropping its cloned branches on the ground until they grow. They carbon-dated a nearby fossil of the same plant, which they knew was a clone because of the rare triploid chromosome pattern, and found it to be 43,600 years old.

Poll

Which of these were the wackiest?

  •  Corpse Flower
  •  Elephant Foot Yam
  •  Rafflesia Arnoldis
  •  Venus Flytrap
  •  Nepenthes
  •  Cape Sundew
  •  Strangler Fig
  •  Bear's Head Tooth Mushroom
  •  Witches' Butter
  •  Silver Torch Cactus
  •  Dragon's Blood Tree
  •  Tree Tumbo
  •  Wolffia Anguste
  •  Lithops Julii
  •  Victoria Amazonica
  •  Dracunculus Vulgeris
  •  Kings Holly
  •  General Sherman
  •  Pando
  •  African Acacia
  •  Bladderwort
  •  Drakaea glyptodon
  •  Hydnora Africana
See results without voting

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Comments 61 comments

Seshagopalan profile image
Seshagopalan 5 weeks ago from Chennai, Tamil Nadu
There is a mobile phone near Rafflesia plant in the photo. :-) :-)

Fred 2 months ago
What an amazing collection. Thanks for the info.

RJ Schwartz profile image
RJ Schwartz 2 months ago from Idaho Falls, Idaho
Great hub, I learned so much and the photography was stunning. I'll stick to ivy and herbs. Thanks for sharing

Taranwanderer profile image
Taranwanderer 3 months ago
I had no idea that acacia's were so deadly. An amazing tree! And, of course, the Draogn's Blood is wacky too.

Iwan Susanto profile image
Iwan Susanto 4 months ago
Good information..Many Thanks

guddy 4 months ago
nice information

Anwardah 5 months ago
plant the 19 number like at my country especially at my village

Nowreen P profile image
Nowreen P 5 months ago from Canada
Great article!

savannah 6 months ago
awsome stuff where in the heck do you find that

Gypsy Willow profile image
Gypsy Willow 9 months ago from Lake Tahoe Nevada USA , Wales UK and Taupo New Zealand
Wonderful weird and wacky hub. Ain't nature wonderful!

Megable 9 months ago
The list is pretty good, but as a biology researcher that specializes on the medical uses for different fungi it makes me cringe to see fungi on this list. #8 and #9 are NOT plants. Fungi is an entirely different kingdom. If your lists of top ten most interesting animals and this one went well, I encourage you to make one of your favorite fungi. People often have a preconceived not on that fungi are gross and useless and I think they would be interested to know all the different uses and interesting tidbits about them!

lol 10 months ago
theese are good plants

Canita Pro profile image
Canita Pro 11 months ago from Joplin, Missouri
Great research.

lyoness913 profile image
lyoness913 11 months ago from Overland Park, KS
This hub is amazing! I love it- and I learned something. Plants that smell like a rotting corpse.. trees that kill.. plants that eat rats..
Awesome!
-Wendi

dan 11 months ago
I loved it!!!!!!!!10 star

phildazz profile image
phildazz 12 months ago from Toronto
wonderful read, very informative and enlightening.

Besarien profile image
Besarien 13 months ago
Thank you! I really needed this hub today! Voted up and everything else.

Brock 14 months ago
i love your page i you must be very smart get me back

Wondering SLO profile image
Wondering SLO 14 months ago from Maine
"Lastly, if you google image them, you're likely to find a baby pictured on top of them." My favorite part of the article! Thanks for such an informative yet interesting hub!

aesta1 profile image
aesta1 14 months ago from Ontario, Canada
These flowers are lovely and the pictures must have been hard to come by.

Kristen Howe profile image
Kristen Howe 14 months ago from Northeast Ohio
Great list are far-out amazing plants out there. Real informative and interesting as well. Voted up!

Cj 15 months ago
These plants are awesome

Tanner 17 months ago
By definition, fungi aren't plants; that kind of mix-up is inexcusable.

madushika 19 months ago
wow this helps me lots on my studies.

Lorx 19 months ago
Nice searching

cristofer 19 months ago
i seen them on discovery channel

faith 19 months ago
cool

alkanarula profile image
alkanarula 22 months ago from INDIA
I have only seen them on discovery channel...I loved the Silver torch.

shobha gahlot 22 months ago
very interesting and important collection of amazing plants.

jaz khan 22 months ago
Its really wonderful....amazing ...thx for shearing ..

Journey * profile image
Journey * 23 months ago from USA
This is very interesting and well done. Thanks for sharing. Voted up and interesting.

josh e 23 months ago
what the heck look at no.5

luke 23 months ago
they are some wacky plants

joshua c 23 months ago
i love it

lol 23 months ago
epic

gabbie 24 months ago
i love ur article it was amazing. me and my class r glad u wrote

gs 24 months ago
amazing

goodnews11 profile image
goodnews11 2 years ago from CHENNAI
Nice article.. I was thinking of publishing a hub on carnivorous plants.. You did it. Well done.. voted up.. Interesting..

bob 2 years ago
I never new that there was something called a Venus fly tarp

DrMark1961 profile image
DrMark1961 2 years ago from The Beach of Brazil
There is also a cashew tree here in Brazil that covers around 90,000 square feet.
Another great hub? Top 10 Giant plants that you can eat (and do not smell like corpses).
I really enjoyed this, thanks.

zsobig profile image
zsobig 2 years ago from United Kingdom
Very nice comprehensive list, thank you for sharing!

rebeccamealey profile image
rebeccamealey 2 years ago from Northeastern Georgia, USA
Great Hub. I'll bet it gets HOTD. I will leave it at that. Oh, and shared,too.

Suzanne Day profile image
Suzanne Day 2 years ago from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Wow, what an amazing hub! I like the Wolffia Anguste the most. Very jealous ;) Voted up and useful.

Nancy Owens profile image
Nancy Owens 2 years ago from USA
Very Cool! I love the photos. Most of these are ones I have never heard of before today.

pstraubie48 profile image
pstraubie48 2 years ago from sunny Florida
To use an overused term AWESOME..I am learning so much today...and love the 'wackiness'...how cool are these??
How could anything as lovely as the corpse flower be stinky??
Thanks for the great share....
Angels are on the way ps
pinned and shared

cydro profile image
cydro 2 years ago from KentuckyAuthor
Wow, gross. That took me down a long Wikipedia road lol

cydro profile image
cydro 2 years ago from KentuckyAuthor
I know haha, I cheated. Maybe I could rename it most interesting non-animals, but that doesn't seem as catchy.

OSU 2 years ago
Check out the Bleeding tooth fungus!

Lisa 2 years ago
Why did you put fungi in the same group as plants? Fungi actually are more like animals than plants! :)

Shil1978 profile image
Shil1978 2 years ago
Interesting hub. Personally, I've been fascinated by the pitcher plant! Thanks for sharing :)

FlourishAnyway profile image
FlourishAnyway 2 years ago from USA
Awesome hub! I love your examples and the photos, too. Voted up and pinning this!

purnasrinivas profile image
purnasrinivas 2 years ago from Bangalore
A well informed hub.

ratnaveera profile image
ratnaveera 2 years ago from Cumbum
Very interesting to read all these amazing facts about this 20 plants found in different parts of the world. Thank you so much cydro for presenting this wonderful Hub with beautiful pictures! Voted Up!

Marcos 2 years ago
I like the website.If you know an inmortal plant tell me in the next comment.

idigwebsites profile image
idigwebsites 3 years ago from United States
Mother Nature is really amazing and has some sense of humor. Fabulous plants, especially the bear's head tooth mushroom and the victoria amazonica. Up, awesome and interesting. :)

Lovegarden 3 years ago
Awesome hug! I just discovered the TickleMe Plant and now I grow then in my class. The TickleMe Plant is a very wacky house plant that closes its leaves either one by one or all at once when you Tickle It!

Ivona Poyntz profile image
Ivona Poyntz 4 years ago from UK
Great hub, I've only ever seen a venus flytrap up close, but Victoria amazonica looka amazing: not wacky at all really, something that might be great in a summer pond...

Gypsy Willow profile image
Gypsy Willow 4 years ago from Lake Tahoe Nevada USA , Wales UK and Taupo New Zealand
This is a wonderful hub and superbly written. Thanks for a great read, interesting, entertaining and educational. Congratulations! I loved it!

cydro profile image
cydro 4 years ago from KentuckyAuthor
Thanks guys! Yeah cocopreme, you're totally right about the whole Mario thing. That made me chuckle a little.

Greensleeves Hubs profile image
Greensleeves Hubs 4 years ago from Essex, UK
Nice page; interesting for me not least because I've kept several of these - the carnivorous plants, Lithops, and the cactus. Some are surprisingly easy to grow.

cocopreme profile image
cocopreme 4 years ago from Far, far away
These plants are amazing! This hub is great. I would love to have a pond full of the giant lily pads. It looks like something you would see in a Mario game. Fabulous hub.
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