The senescing flower of a Northern Pitcher Plant, Sarracenia purpurea, aka Purple Pitcher Plant.
Northern Pitcher Plants grow in bogs, particularly sphagnum bogs and moors throughout much of Canada and eastern USA, where the soils are nutritionally poor. They adapt to their situation by having large, tubular leaves which serve as ‘pitchers’ gathering water. Insects fall into these and drown in the water, eventually being converted into nutrition for the plant by digestive enzimes which the plant secretes into the base of the pitchers.
This photograph is available to licence as a stock photo from iStock.
This flower was photographed in the wild in Newfoundland, where it is known simply as ‘Pitcher Plant’. It is the provincical flower of Newfoundland and Canada, having been chosen as such by Queen Victoria and engraved on the province’s penny. It was adopted as the province’s official floral emblem in 1954.
Both images are copyright © Liz Leyden. All rights strictly as agreed in writing with the author or her agent.
It is available for sale as various types of wall art, and as home and personal accessories, from my gallery at Pixels.com.
My original photograph, on which this image is based, is available to license as a stock photo from iStock, and also as wall art from Pixels.com.