World of Carnivores, Carnivorous Plants, Guides & Supplies

Carnivorous Plants, Guides and Supplies

Care Guides | Propagation | Tissue Culture | Links | Policies | Build a Bog | Make A Terrarium | Contact | Forum | Site Search | Mailing List
CP Books | CP Shirts | Plants for Sale | Terrarium Kits | Empty Terrariums | Pots/Saucers | Live Food | CP Soil | CP Seed | Ga3 | File TREE


Welcome to World of Carnivores,
Check out our Carnivorous Plants Forum!
Most of the carnivorous plant information you are probably after can be found in the care and propagation sections. They have information you can not access from any other page.

We offer various carnivorous plants for sale along with care/propagation guides and tissue culture techniques. We also offer carnivorous plant soil, kord flower pots, water saucers, terrariums and terrarium kits. The best part about terrarium kept carnivorous plants is the ability to feed them flightless fruit flies. :-) We have put the terrariums on hold, carnivorous plants do NOT need them and we do not want to add to this growing myth. Empty terrariums are still available in the store. CP's do look great in a large terrarium though.

Our goal is to provide you with all the information and basic supplies to grow, propagate, tissue culture, feed and purchase carnivorous plants. Please use the links above to navigate the site, I have tried to make everything user friendly. Input of any kind is appreciated.

Carnivorous plants are some of the oldest plants in the world. Nepenthes, especially. Carnivorous Plants grow in areas that are nutrient free so they evolved to eat bugs. The bugs allow them to survive in this nutrient free environment. Carnivorous plants do not necessarily come from far off exotic places though. Several come from right here in the United States. No matter where they come from, most of the carnivorous plants can survive happily in and around your home. Please see the care sections to learn the needs of the various carnivorous plants.

For the most part each carnivorous plant is not detailed because one technique works for so many. As you learn more and become more experienced you should delve deeper.

Send helpful techniques, advice or anything else you would like to share about carnivorous plants through the e-mail link above. Please don't send a lot of technical mumbo jumbo as this site was created with the beginner in mind, plain English please or I will have to modify it, assuming I understand it. ;-) Credit is always given for anything sent in and published.





Numerous carnivorous plants are listed on the endangered species list. Field collection is not only illegal but it puts a strain on the carnivorous plants. Please only purchase carnivorous plants from places you know are not involved in field collection. Most of our plants are created by us in house through seed, cuttings and tissue culture. The rest come from reputable wholesale Nurseries.


Carnivorous Plants Ping and U. Gibba
Ping growing on lava rock in a fish bowl. U. Gibba growing in the water. Both are flowering.



Carnivorous Plant Web Ring
Previous Site
Next Site
International Carnivorous Plant Society

Visitors to this page
since April 20, 2005


The Walhello Search Engine

Copyright © 2005 World of Carnivores


Description: World of Carnivores offers carnivorous plants, guides and supplies along with carnivorous plant tissue culture techniques. For a limited time we are giving away SuperThrive samples with all carnivorous plants orders. All carnivorous plants guaranteed healthy arrival. The carnivorous plant care sections also talk about carnivorous plant soil and water along with pollination/seed collecting and more. You can even learn how to winterize your carnivorous plants. The carnivorous plant propagation section covers most types available to each family. We also have a section to help people tissue culture carnivorous plants.