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Meat-eating plants making a comeback

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Published: 05:05, 4 September 2019   Update: 15:18, 26 July 2020
Meat-eating plants making a comeback

Risingbd Desk: Endangered carnivorous plants are being reintroduced to parts of England in an attempt to reverse their decline.

Botanists say the "fascinating and beautiful" great sundew is extinct in many areas, due to loss of wetlands.

With tentacles that trap and digest insects, the plant is one of a dozen or so meat-eating plants native to the UK.

Charles Darwin was captivated by the species, compiling drawings and experiments for his book, Insectivorous Plants, published around 1876.

He said he cared more about the genus Drosera, which means dewy in Latin, than the origin of all the species in the world.

"It's a very rare species," said Joshua Styles, a 24-year-old from Cheshire, who has set up his own conservation charity, the North West Rare Plant Initiative, to conserve rare flora, including the great or English sundew (Drosera anglica).

"In England it's red-listed as endangered and it occurs in less than 20 sites and hence its rarity and status instigated me wanting to reintroduce it."

The Red List is an inventory that shows the conservation status of different global species. It's compiled by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Once commonly found in England, the plant has suffered a dramatic decline over the last century.
Changes in land use have led to the drying of the wetlands and peat bogs it needs to survive.
The great sundew is found more widely in Scotland and Wales.

Joshua Styles was able to cultivate the plant from leaf cuttings taken from a few small populations, which have clung on to survival in Cumbria.

He reintroduced 10 of the plants at Risley Moss near Warrington, working with Chester Zoo and the Lancashire Wildlife Trust.

The meat-eating plant should thrive in this habitat and start multiplying.

"Every year when it flowers, it produces tens of thousands of tiny seeds that look a bit like dust," he said.
"Planting out 10, it might not sound a lot, but the number of seeds they produce, I'm hoping for a healthy number of seedlings next year - hopefully numbering hundreds."

The young conservationist was hooked by botany at the age of seven, and has been studying plants ever since.

He says it's important to conserve meat-eating plants for their benefits to the environment and biodiversity, and for their potential future benefits for us, such as as a potential source of new medicines.

Source: BBC

 

risingbd/Sept 4, 2019/Mukul

 

 

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