Field Notes · Carnivorous
Carnivorous plants
Vocabulary, altitude ranges, and the handful of concepts that shape how growers talk about Nepenthes, Sarracenia, and their kin.
Vocabulary
Carnivorous plant hobbyists use a specific shorthand — most of it borrowed from Nepenthes, the pitcher-plant vine that dominates the hobby. A short glossary to get you oriented.
- Pitcher
- The modified leaf trap. On Nepenthes it dangles from a tendril; on Sarracenia it grows upright from the rhizome.
- Peristome
- The ribbed lip around the mouth of the pitcher. Color and shape of the peristome is often the key ID feature.
- Operculum
- The lid above the pitcher's mouth. Keeps rain from diluting the digestive fluid.
- Tendril
- The thread-like extension of the leaf midrib that the pitcher hangs from (Nepenthes).
- Lower / upper pitcher
- Young Nepenthes grow squat, ground-dwelling "lowers"; mature vines produce slimmer, aerial "uppers". Intermediate forms sit between.
- Rosette
- The tight whorl of leaves many non-climbing carnivores (Sarracenia, Drosera, Dionaea) produce from a central crown.
- Trigger hair
- The tactile sensor on Venus flytraps (Dionaea). Two touches within seconds snap the trap shut.
Altitude & difficulty
Elevation is a proxy for temperature and humidity. Matching your setup to a plant's altitude range is the single highest-impact thing you can do.
Warm and wet — day & night. Think windowsill tropical or a warm grow tent. Most forgiving for beginners.
Warm days, cooler nights. A window of entry to many of the flagship hybrids.
Needs a meaningful day/night temperature swing — usually an AC or peltier cooler. The classic mountain species live here.
Cold, wet, and bright. A serious commitment — dedicated grow chamber territory.
Key genera
A quick tour of the families you'll bump into most often. Click through to the wiki for full species lists and cultivation notes.
Nepenthes
Tropical pitcher plants. Hanging traps on climbing vines. The hobby's flagship genus.
Sarracenia
North American trumpet pitchers. Outdoor-hardy in temperate climates with winter dormancy.
Drosera
Sundews. Sticky dew-drop traps, from beginner-proof Capes to tricky petiolaris-complex tropicals.
Dionaea
Venus flytrap — a single species (D. muscipula) with hundreds of cultivars.
Cephalotus
Australian pitcher plant. One species. Tight rosette of small, toothed pitchers.
Heliamphora
Sun pitchers. Endemic to the Venezuelan tepuis. Cool-growing highlanders with a prehistoric feel.