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When plants become ultrafast killers, it's time to slow the camera down

Discover the fascinating world of carnivorous plants and their ultrafast killers, like the bladderwort with its unique suction traps.

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In my National Geographic article last year on carnivorous plants, I mentioned one particularly swift killer, the bladderwort. This aquatic plant grows little suction traps that can be triggered by passing animals. In a new paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, French researchers take the closest look yet at these ultrafast killers. They find that the door to the traps buckles like a popped bubble of chewing gum--but can then almost immediately swing back shut. Along with the new study on jumping fleas I wrote about last week, this is evidence of how far we're just starting to explore the world of quick biology. Science News has a nice write-up, and here is an excellent YouTube video provided by a co-author of the study, Philippe Marmottant, a physicist at Joseph Fourier University in Grenoble, France--complete with computer simulation, rubber-cap demos, and groovy soundtrack. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zb_SLZFsMyQ

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