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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Science
Paul Simons

Plantwatch: Pitcher plant’s sweet nectar is laced with toxic nerve agent

The lidded, deep, green and red trap of Nepenthes khasiana
Nepenthes khasiana digests insects in its juices at the bottom of its pitcher traps. Photograph: carla65/Alamy

A carnivorous pitcher plant has recently been found to use a chemical nerve agent to drug its prey and lead them to a deadly end, being consumed in digestive juices at the bottom of the pitcher traps.

The pitcher plant Nepenthes khasiana oozes an enticing sweet nectar on the rim of its pitchers for visiting insects, particularly ants, to feed on to lure them into the trap. But the nectar is laced with a toxic nerve agent called isoshinanolone, which strikes at the ant’s nervous system, leaving it with sluggish movements, weakened muscles, and causing it to groom itself excessively. Eventually the prey falls upside down in spasms, with the nerve agent sometimes killing it outright. But apart from isoshinanolone, the nectar also contains three types of sugars that can all absorb water and make the rim of the pitcher especially slippery, so the prey is more likely to slide down into the pitchers.

And so the sweet, toxic nectar is both bait and trap for the many ants and other prey that end up being consumed, giving the plant much needed nourishment in the poor soil in which it grows.

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