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Rat-eating Plant Discovered in Australia

Megaport writes "Finally, the news that every slashdot-meme poster have been waiting for. A rat-eating vine called "Tenax" has been discovered in the rainforests of the Cape York region in Queensland, Australia"

43 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. Too Bad. by airencracken · · Score: 5, Funny

    I figured it'd be more useful in the fire swamps.

    --
    Hell is other people - Jean-Paul Sartre
    1. Re:Too Bad. by Guppy · · Score: 3, Funny

      I figured it'd be more useful in the fire swamps. Unlikely. Rat-eating vines of Unusual Size? I don't think they exis
    2. Re:Too Bad. by jcr · · Score: 4, Funny

      Let's buy as many of them as we can, and plant them in Washington DC.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:Too Bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, even vines have their standards.

    4. Re:Too Bad. by montyzooooma · · Score: 2, Funny

      I figured it'd be more useful in the fire swamps. Unlikely. Rat-eating vines of Unusual Size? I don't think they exis The very idea is inconceivable.
    5. Re:Too Bad. by ti1ion · · Score: 2, Funny

      I do not think that word means what you think it means.

    6. Re:Too Bad. by Bandman · · Score: 2, Funny

      But wouldn't a vine that could eat an RUS be of unusual size itself? I would think it would have to scale up to meet the larger size requirements.

      Fire plating would also help.

  2. no video? by nbowman · · Score: 2

    or at least a full article :( does anyone have more information on these?

    1. Re:no video? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The locations of rare plants are often not disclosed here - I believe the location of the Wollemi Pine was also ( maybe still ) kept secret to stop people showing up and looting them.

  3. Die, Turtles! by MarkRose · · Score: 3, Funny

    I, for one, welcome our Splinter eating overloads!

    --
    Be relentless!
  4. revolution by Arellias · · Score: 3, Funny

    the citizens of new york can now take back their subways from their vermin overlords.

  5. Australian Geographic by rowlingj · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Australian Geographic magazine has an article on these plants. Apparently they are in an area which also has lots of saltwater crocodiles, so not even humans can claim to be at the top of the food chain there! http://editorial.australiangeographic.com.au/ is the front page but the article does not appear to be on-line.

  6. Re:Meme? by Hawkeye05 · · Score: 2, Funny

    All Our Base Are Belong to Them?

    --
    Http://Stineomite.org (Yeah Thats Right I'm An Organization)
  7. Re:Large pitcher plant by Merls+the+Sneaky · · Score: 4, Informative
  8. Cool by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now, how can I get my Ex to be around it?

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  9. Pic and more info by MonkeyBoyo · · Score: 5, Informative

    picture here, and there is even a Wikipedia entry.

  10. Mass Production for Export by tcolberg · · Score: 4, Funny

    New York desperately needs them, especially that KFC-Taco Bell from a year ago (http://www.ksdk.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=113755). Then again, maybe Washington needs them more for the big ones they have there.

    1. Re:Mass Production for Export by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 5, Funny

      Then again, maybe Washington needs them more for the big ones they have there.

      Tenax for President in '08! He'll clean up Washington!

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
  11. Re:Which meme now? by pesho · · Score: 2, Funny

    You must be new here. You should have used "Imagine a Beowulf cluster out of those!" in this case.

  12. Re:Meme? by bhtooefr · · Score: 4, Funny

    I just have one question for the moderators...

    Because Slashdot memes were mentioned in the story, are Slashdot memes exactly off-topic?

  13. Re:Go ahead, say something retarded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    That's pretty neat, you managed to fit two memes in one line bashing memes.

    You did intend to do that... no? Well, at least it managed to be self descriptive.

  14. The horror by the_fat_kid · · Score: 2, Funny

    dear lord, not Washington. They would go all kudzu crazy.
    Think Day Of The Triffids vs. Mr. Smith Goes To Washington.

    --
    -- Sig under construction...
  15. Tarzan by michaelmalak · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Suddely those old Tarzan movies don't seem so far-fetched anymore.

  16. send in the lawyers! by Coraon · · Score: 2

    wait, I didnt think plants would eat lawyers...heh, guess everything has its place on the food chain, huh?

    --
    -Ours is the wisdom of Solomon, the magic of Merlyn, the fall of Icaris.
  17. Re:Meme? by Architect_sasyr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In Soviet Russia moderators question YOU!

    I for one welcome our new rat-eating-vine-overlords and would like to offer little Sam who snitched on me in the third grade as the first rat/human sacrifice.

    --
    Me failed English...
    FreeBSD over Linux. If my comments seem odd, this may explain...
  18. Small Fry... by spokedoke · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Who cares about a wee little rodent eating plant when they have trees attacking cows in India!

  19. Re:Meme? by y86 · · Score: 3, Funny

    No.. in Soviet Russia, post questions YOU!

  20. Re:Which meme now? by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Funny

    Wrong meme. Here in America, rats eat plants, but in Soviet Australia, plants eat rats!

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
  21. Doesn't surprise me by Cathoderoytube · · Score: 4, Funny

    Given that pretty much absolutely everything else in Australia is poisonous or capable of eating a full grown human being it doesn't surprise me that plants thewould start making things worse for other creatures as well.

    --
    I have nothing compelling to say
    1. Re:Doesn't surprise me by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 2, Funny
      Given that pretty much absolutely everything else in Australia is poisonous or capable of eating a full grown human being...

      That's not entirely true. There's one snake (Pailsus pailsei) here that isn't poisonous. Mind you, it survives by imitating a Brown Snake, which is.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  22. Kinda small for a pitcher plant by dl107227 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Other links that discuss this plant mention pitchers that are 15cm. A 6 in pitcher is going to have a hard time holding onto a rat. Pitchers capture their prey by drowning. Fine, downward pointing hairs prevent creatures from crawling back out of a pitcher once they have entered. Again I have a hard time believing that this plant can regularly restrain small mammals. I don't doubt that an occasional small mammal may get trapped but I bet most escape. And a 6 inch pitcher is not all that big. The yellow pitcher plant of North America (genus Sarracenia (no close relation to Nepenthes))can have pitchers that exceed a 12 inches in length (they are more narrow however). Also, many Nepenthes species are vine so that mention in the article is likely from a journalist trying to increase his/her word count.

    1. Re:Kinda small for a pitcher plant by TranscendentalAnarch · · Score: 5, Funny

      And a 6 inch pitcher is not all that big. You know... they've got pills for that.
  23. Co-author "Rod Kruger" sells carnivorous plants by MonkeyBoyo · · Score: 4, Informative
    I haven't been able to find online the paper

    "Clarke, C.M & R. Kruger 2006. Nepenthes tenax C.Clarke and R.Kruger (Nepenthaceae), a new species from Cape York Peninsula, Queensland. Austrobaileya 7(2): 319-324.
    nor can I find a personal page for Charles Clark who is now supposed to be at the Hong_Kong_University_of_Science_and_Technology.

    However the co-author "R.Kruger" is Rod Kruger who runs Captive Exotics,

    We are an Australian carnivorous plant nursery specialising in Nepenthes, or tropical pitcher plants.
    The first author Charles Clark seems to have an interest in this business

    Rod kruger is selling them :) atm he is away but charles clarke is looking after his nursery for now.
  24. Peculiar Name by jessiej · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hmm, is there any coincidence that the name of new the species resembles "Texan"?

  25. Ode to Carnivorous Plants by tubapro12 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ode to Carnivorous Plants

    Your nutrients are derived
    From those so kin to me
    Yesterday, Mus musculus frolicked by you
    Today, the sweet smell of you absorbing his tiny brain

    Your large pitcher, an inviting opening
    But oh, the Musmanity!
    For it is full of your digestive fluids
    But wait, rain approaches

    Your operculum must spring forth, like an umbrella
    But all is fell, your pseudo-stomach is full
    Enjoy the rain, my sweet
    For one can only hope, you avoid your own pitfall.

  26. Sensationalism by estitabarnak · · Score: 4, Informative

    Plants in the genus Nepenthes have been known to catch the odd large-animal from time to time. Notably, Nepenthes raja which have been observed to grow individual pitchers that are capable of containing volumes of fluid up to ~3.5 litres. You can find pictures strewn across the internet of a Nepenthes or other carnivorous plant having caught a rat, a bird, a bat, a toad, a shrew, but these are not the normal constituents of carnivorous plant diets. Generally larger fauna caught by carnivorous plants are suspected of simply looking for a drink and being sick or near death anyway. Often times, due to the inability of the plant to digest these creatures the pitcher will often suffer rather than benefit the plant as a whole.

    Some awesome, yet very unusual examples:

    A bat was caught by a Nepenthes and discovered during the North Eastern Carnivorous Plant Society meeting in 2007. Note that the bat (though it stunk to high-hell) is largely in tact, a testament to the fact that these plants aren't made for eating larger creatures. http://terraforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=110338

    A treefrog caught by a venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) caught and successfully digested- all but the skeleton, of course! http://terraforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=93070&highlight=frog While a new species of carnivorous plant is always welcome, until enzymes produced by the pitcher, or a symbiotic relationship between bacteria and plant is found which specifically targets rats or other mammals, I call BS to the claim of it being a rat-eater.

  27. dude, Mozilla 1.7.13 is so like 2006 by MonkeyBoyo · · Score: 2, Informative
    Mozilla 1.7.13 says

    Release Date:, 2006-04-2
    So you haven't updated your browser even though when you run it eventually there pops up a window that says you really need to update it NOW and gives you a button to click on to do it? Personally I don't know anybody who is still running "Mozilla". For just a browser they run "Firefox" and for integrated Web and Email they run "SeaMonkey".
    1. Re:dude, Mozilla 1.7.13 is so like 2006 by aztektum · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm guessing Tenax ate his mouse, making it difficult to click on the "Update Now" button

      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
  28. Carnivorous plants are fun but this is nothing new by Xest · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Large Nepenthes have been known for many, many years. Do a search on Google images for "Nepenthes mouse" and you'll find examples of where people have had rats and mice fall victim to nepenthes in people's greenhouses so there's little reason it wont happen in the wild, although I suppose you could argue animals should be more wise to it in their natural environments.

    There was a story going around various carnivorous plant communities and quite honestly I can't verify it's truth but needless to say it seems plausible. There was apparently a zoo that had some large nepenthes in the monkey enclosure (They're often just called monkey cups because monkeys have been known to drink from them in the wild) and they had to be removed because baby monkeys kept falling into the pitchers and required rescuing before they began to get digested which in turn apparently made many of the children at the zoo observing the monkeys cry.

    You can keep nepenthes at home, some species are easy to keep as they don't need a massive amount of humidity and don't need especially warm temperatures but others can be kept in a greenhouse. Personally I keep one in the bathroom as use of the shower provides all the humidity it needs in that room and it does a decent job of dealing with spiders and mossies that make their way in there although be warned, the digestive process isn't particularly fast or terribly exciting, we're talking weeks or months. They do look impressive though, particularly the species with red pitchers or the combined reddish/yellow/green pitchers.

    It's interesting keeping carnivorous plants and I started it because I got fed up of insects in my computer room in the summer. I didn't want an insecticutor as the room gets too hot as is and I don't want to use even more electricity so I figured the natural route may be an interesting option, it certainly is. Sundew (drosera), Venus flytraps (dionaea muscipula), Pitcher plants (nepenthes and saracennia) and butterworts (pinguicula) are the best bet.

    If you are interested in getting started with carnivorous plants, I don't recommend trying from seed at first and you really need rainwater or distilled water (tap water doesn't cut it) but there are decent suppliers everywhere (www.littleshopofhorrors.co.uk if you're in the UK is decent). The one thing I will say though is please, if you are going to maintain your own creature killing plants use peat from sustainable sources or alternatives! There's no reason you can't keep this type of plant at home though if you can get hold of one from a legitimate source (i.e. not looted from the wild) which isn't too hard.

    What I really want is a rat catching venus flytrap or sundew, now THAT would be something ;)

  29. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  30. Re:Bogus story headline - not a rat-eating plant by Darundal · · Score: 2, Funny

    So he should get a job reporting for the Fox News Channel?

  31. Re:Carnivorous plants are fun but this is nothing by MrVictor · · Score: 2, Informative

    Nepenthes Rajah is probably the most notorious rat catcher. The pitchers on average are about the size of a NFL football and dwarf these newly discovered ones. http://www.vcps.au.com/pics/plants/n_rajah.jpg

  32. Re:If you can use a banana to prove god exists... by jollyreaper · · Score: 4, Funny

    why dont you ever hear of these things.... which are WAY more seemingly complicated and amazing and "improbable", as the proof that god exists?

    oh yeah, that would be horrific. I would love to see a Satainst make the religious argument for intelligent design. Parasites! Holy crap, there's some material. "Ok, here's the penis fish. You piss in the Amazon, this little sucker will follow the ammonia right up to your pee hole and dig in. It has barbs. And if that doesn't get you, let's talk about fresh water amoeba that will get in your brain and drive you mad! And let's not forget venereal diseases, genetic diseases, mosquito-born diseases. All of this created by God! He's got a thousand species of carnivorous mold, each species perfectly adapted to attacking a given species of ant! All of this playing out below typical human notice, below human care! How about the mud-dauber wasp, kidnapping poor defenseless caterpillars to paralyze them and leave them as a live meal for their eggs, to hatch and feast upon them? Yum yum! That is one sick motherfucker right there, folks. Now let me tell you about my guy..."
    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne