This plant, named Nepenthes pongoides, belongs to the largest known pitcher plants and may be at risk of extinction. A research team led by Alastair Robinson from the Royal Botanic Gardens in ...
With stems reaching up to nearly 5 feet and pitchers that grow to roughly a foot in diameter, it’s the world’s largest carnivorous plant. Endemic to Borneo, Nepenthes rajah has enormous pitchers which ...
It boasts the most extensive area of native grasslands in the province and is the largest wetland of its type in Newfoundland and Labrador. It is home to various types of flora, including the pitcher ...
As Dr Martin Cheek points out, tropical pitcher plants “are unique because some species have the largest animal traps known in the plant world, and attract, trap and digest, not just large ...
The plant will now close in 2025 and be replaced by a large-scale battery. It adds to a long list of coal plants forced shut by the growth of cheap wind and solar energy in the country.