Thank you all for liking and appreciating it. The image by Shrikant Ji 
seems quite robust plant, here it is thin and slender.
DSRawat Pantnagar

On Monday, August 26, 2013 2:03:04 PM UTC+5:30, D.S Rawat wrote:
>
> Bladdertworts or Utricularias are insectivorous plants; no matter how 
> small are they. This *Utricularia striatula* Smith (Lentibulariaceae) is 
> a tiny plant reaching to a height of only 3 cm. It grows along with mosses 
> on moist rock faces with dripping water in shady conditions or on tree 
> trunks. Basal part of the inflorescence axis produces few creeping 
> branches-stolons, which bear small insect trapping devices evolved by this 
> genus during evolution. These traps are named variously- urceoli, ampullae, 
> vesiculae, utriculae, pitchers, bladders etc. The traps shown here are 
> hardly 1-1.5 mm large with a mouth (orifice) encircled by many appendages 
> (hair like structure).
>
> True leaves are absent in *Utricularia* and green photosynthetic organs 
> are referred as foliar organs which are present at the base of 
> inflorescence axis or on stolons here.
>
> In vegetative state *U.striatula* is very difficult to differentiate due 
> to small size and only becomes noticeable when flowers appear on erect 
> 2-3cm tall inflorescence axis. Flowers are comparatively larger being 7-10 
> mm including spur and colourful.
>
> This species is widespread in India and reaches to Tropical Africa to 
> Malesia, China and Sri Lanka.
>
> 35 species of *Utricularia* are reported by M.K.Janarthanam and A.N.Henry 
> in their fine document “*Bladderworts of India*” published by Botanical 
> Survey of India in 1992. It was this document and help of these authors 
> which enabled me to identify my specimens as *U.brachiata* Olive in 1999, 
> a very rare Himalayan terrestrial bladderwort and was a new record to 
> Western Himalaya.
>
> Photographs shot near Jeolikot on way to Naini Tal in August 2013. 
>
> With so minute bladders and even smaller mouth how much small insect will 
> it trap and digest? Whatever it may eat, it is happy and flourishing in its 
> habitats.
> DSRawat Pantnagar
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"efloraofindia" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/indiantreepix.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to