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Re: My N. Mirabilis var. echinostoma has a salty peristome!
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All my lowland Nepenthes are in a hermetically sealed greenhouse outside under a metal awning. People often ask why i don`t grow them in the open. Well, while our weather is very sunny and warm, the humidity can drop really low for months on end, so keeping the plants in a greenhouse solves this. I keep the greenhouse out the sun or else it would cook, also it protects it from our violent storms in Summer, when we often get golf ball-size hail and damaging winds. Light: The plants get indirect daylight (no sun), they also get 800W of Metal Halide and HO fluorescent lighting 14 hours a day. Temps: 30c-32c in the day, 26c-28c at night, often the temps can reach 38c in the day in Summer. Humidity: 70%-90% Media: 2/4 Canadian Sphagnum Peat, 1/4 Perlite (dead), 1/4 Medium Pine Bark Watering: Once weekly with RO water, 0 PPM I have had the plant for almost a year and a half, but only recently has it`s nectar tasted salty. I`ve noticed that it never has more than three living pitchers on it at any one time, and that the lids wither long before the pitchers die, often a month before this. Also, it is doing something else unbelievable, see my other thread for the crazy details! Hope this all helps. http://www.greenelectrichome.com/_DSC0744.JPG |
Re: My N. Mirabilis var. echinostoma has a salty peristome!
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Re: My N. Mirabilis var. echinostoma has a salty peristome!
I'm not sure how nepenthes will be able to catch Butterflies, as I imagine the wings will be too bit to fit in most mouths/opening, unless it's a small species of butterfly. Maybe some other kind of insect that has the need for salt like butterflies? Another way is to inspect and do a study on what insects are found in pitchers in the wild.
TTFN Arvin |
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