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The bladderwort continued to do its work, and he almost wished it would not.
He felt a jolt of energy course through his body, and knew it was bladderwort, a powerful stimulant.
Remoteness and exhaustion faded as the bladderwort entered his bloodstream.
The main part of a bladderwort plant always lies beneath the surface of its substrate.
A variety of aquatic plants have been identified including sedges, bull rushes and bladderwort.
Floating bladderwort may be a common name for:
Lentibulariaceae is a family of plants commonly called the bladderwort family.
The name bladderwort refers to the bladder-like traps.
Other species, such as the Purple bladderwort, a small carnivorous plant, have found niches in sloughs.
Common bladderwort may refer to these species:
A bladderwort is shown invading a bromeliad.
Utricularia australis is a medium sized, perennial species of aquatic bladderwort.
One notable exchange concerns the bladderwort plant, Utricularia clandestina.
Don't confuse bladderwrack with bladderwort.
A rare species of free floating insectivorous bladderwort plant called utricularia australis is said to be found here.
"Here's bladderwort - that's for remembrance ..." - Shakespeare's Hamlet.
Aquatic plants include water fern, water lily, coontail, bladderwort and spatterdock.
It has several possible explanations including "bllader-plant specialised-farm", a form of the name "blackthorn" or "settlement where bladderwort grows".
Bladderwort (Utricularia)
The dappled diversity of the forest and scattered flowers like pipsissewa, Indian pipes and bladderwort captivated us.
Utricularia fulva (Yellow bladderwort) - a small orchid-like plant that grows along sandy creek banks.
Aquatic plants thriving in the shallow lake include Bladderwort, Common Club-rush, and Water Lilies.
Several carnivorous plants inhabit Carolina bays, including bladderwort, butterwort, pitcher plant, and sundew.
Utricularia dichotoma, commonly known as fairy aprons, is a variable, perennial species of terrestrial bladderwort.
Such devices on a small scale are sometimes used in nature to catch prey: for example by the seahorse and the pipefish, and the bladderwort plant.