David A. Harrison · CC BY-SA 4.0
About
Sarracenia alata, also known as yellow trumpets, pale pitcher plant or pale trumpet, is a carnivorous plant in the genus Sarracenia. Specifically, S. alata is an endemic species to North America; it is native to the southeastern regions of the United States, including parts of the Gulf Coast states.
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Sarracenia alata, also known as yellow trumpets, pale pitcher plant or pale trumpet, is a carnivorous plant in the genus Sarracenia. Specifically, S. alata is an endemic species to North America; it is native to the southeastern regions of the United States, including parts of the Gulf Coast states.
Distribution
Like all Sarracenia species, S. alata is endemic to the New World, having evolved its perennial growth habit and insect-supplementation as a result of its unique ecological niche and environment. These pitcher plants grow in generally flat and low-lying areas, preferring protection from heavy breezes and high winds. They thrive where most plants would likely perish—in consistently saturated soils that are generally low in nutrients—as well as open wetlands, typically classified as longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) savannas.
The pale pitcher plant's habitat is split into two geographically separate areas: an eastern range from East Louisiana across the Gulf Coastline of Mississippi, and into West Alabama. The species also has a western range from East Texas into West Louisiana. In Mississippi, there are mature, wild specimens of S. alata which rival the sheer size of any other Sarracenia species.
Habitat
- Altitude
- 0–150 m
- Altitude Class
- lowland
- Native To
- United States, Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi
Cultivation
- Difficulty
- easy
- Temperature
- Summer 22–32°C / Winter dormancy 0–10°C
- Humidity
- 50–80%
- Notes
- Pale yellow-green pitchers, Gulf Coast from Alabama to Texas.