The Main Plant entry for Pitcher Plants (Sarracenia)

This database entry exists to show plant data and photos that apply generically to all Pitcher Plants.

General Plant Information (Edit)
Plant Habit: Herb/Forb
Life cycle: Perennial
Sun Requirements: Full Sun
Full Sun to Partial Shade
Water Preferences: Wet
Wet Mesic
Leaves: Unusual foliage color
Deciduous
Flowers: Showy
Flower Time: Spring
Late spring or early summer
Summer
Underground structures: Rhizome
Suitable Locations: Bog gardening
Uses: Water gardens
Resistances: Flood Resistant
Humidity tolerant
Propagation: Seeds: Stratify seeds: Stratify seeds in wet medium for 4-5 weeks
Propagation: Other methods: Division
Other: Division can be done in early to mid spring, after pitchers are cut back but just before new growth starts coming up.
Miscellaneous: Tolerates poor soil
Carnivorous
Goes Dormant

Image
Common names
  • Pitcher Plant

Photo Gallery
Location: Atlanta BG
Date: Aug 16
Location: Atlanta BG
Date: 2022-08-16
Location: Madison, FL
Date: 2017-12-26
two groups of wild pitcher plants growing on a farm in north Flor
Location: Madison, FL
Date: 2011-07-23
Wild pitcher plants growing in a small clearing in north Florida
Location: National Botanical Garden, DC, Virginia :) | May, 2022
Date: 2022-05-28
Location: National Botanical Garden, DC, Virginia :) | May, 2022
Date: 2022-05-28
Uploaded by GrammaChar
Location: National Botanical Garden, DC, Virginia :) | May, 2022
Date: 2022-05-28
Location: MOBOT -   St Louis
Date: 2013-02-25
Location: Used with permission from Carnivorous Greenhouse. Plants for sale: https://carnivorousgreenhouse.com/
Sarracenia 'D. Colossus' x 'V. Treasure'
Location: Longwood Gardens Conservatory, Kennett Square, Pennsylvania USA
Date: 2017-11-24
Location: Elkhart
Date: 2019-08-26
Baby Pitcher
Uploaded by clintbrown
This plant is tagged in:
Image

Comments:
  • Posted by Marilyn (Kentucky - Zone 6a) on May 20, 2013 11:35 PM concerning plant:
    "Sarracenia is a genus of carnivorous plants indigenous to the eastern seaboard, Texas, the Great Lakes area and southeastern Canada, with most species occurring only in the south-east United States (only S. purpurea occurs in cold-temperate regions). The plant's leaves have evolved into a funnel in order to trap insects, digesting their prey with proteases and other enzymes.

    The insects are attracted by a nectar-like secretion on the lip of pitchers, as well as a combination of color and scent. Slippery footing at the pitchers' rim, aided in at least one species by a narcotic drug lacing the nectar, causes insects to fall inside, where they die and are digested by the plant as a nutrient source.

    All Sarracenia trap insects and other prey without the use of moving parts. Their traps are static and are based on a combination of lures (including color, scent, and nectar) and inescapability – typically the entrances to the traps are one-way by virtue of the highly adapted features listed above.

    Most species use a combination of scent, drugged nectar, waxy deposits (to clog insect feet) and gravity to topple insect prey into their pitcher. Coniine, an alkaloid drug narcotic to insects, has been discovered in the nectar-like secretions of at least S. flava. Once inside, the insect finds the footing very slippery with a waxy surface covering the walls of the pitcher. Further down the tube, downward-pointing hairs make retreat impossible, and in the lowest region of the tube, a pool of liquid containing digestive enzymes and wetting agents quickly drowns the prey and begins digestion. The exoskeletons are usually not digested, and over the course of the summer fill up the pitcher tube."

    Taken from wikipedia's page at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

Plant Events from our members
ShawnSteve On February 6, 2022 Seeds sown
Trying once again. With proper stratification.
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