The round-leaved sundew, Drosera rotundifolia, is a diminutive but deadly cousin of the Venus fly trap. Its proper name co0mes from the Greek word meaning "dewy", a reference to the plant's glistening droplets of sticky liquid mounted at the tips of touch-sensitive tentacles. Resembling sweet smelling crystal balls, they serve to fatally attract all manner of flying insects. The hapless creature that alights on this surface begins a futile struggle to free itself from adhesive bonds that are like living flypaper. The more the prey panics, the more its fate is sealed-because each movement signals the sundew to release yet more of the glue-like substance. The tentacle-bearing leaf blade encircles the now-entombed prey by a process of nearly instantaneous growth, . Within several days all that remains of the sundew's meal are the undigestible exoskeleton and wings.Written & Illustrated by Christine Elder