Back to Show
Deep Look
Cape Sundews Trap Bugs In A Sticky Situation
Season 7
Episode 13
Cape sundews are carnivorous plants that grow in bogs, where they don't have access to many nutrients. So they exude sweet, shimmering droplets from their tentacles to lure in unsuspecting insects. Once their prey is hopelessly stuck, they wrap it up and dissolve it for a tasty meal.
Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.

4:02
It’s called nectar robbing: Bees get nectar, but don’t pollinate the plants in exchange.

3:49
Giant water bugs pack one of the most painful bites of any insect, but they're great dads.

4:33
The spotted wing drosophila may look like a common fruit fly, but it’s so much worse.

5:13
Those precious silk garments in your closet were made by the caterpillars of a fuzzy moth.

3:58
Barnacles might look like jagged little rocks, but they have a surprisingly wild sex life.

4:36
Honeypot ants stuff members of their own colony until they look like tiny water balloons.

4:25
What animal sprays acid that reeks of vinegar from its rear end? A vinegaroon, of course.

4:31
The cage fungus looks and smells like decaying meat — on purpose.

5:12
Subterranean termites fly off in swarms, and then drop their wings to start new colonies.

4:59
A twig is actually just one of many disguises for the Australian walking stick insect.

4:46
They might look like harmless grasshoppers, but locusts have an appetite for destruction.

4:58
A kissing bug gorges on your blood, plus it may carry a potentially deadly parasite.