I Built a Carnivorous Plant Ecosystem — Here's What Happened on Day 100"

I built a carnivorous plant ecosystem from scratch — three species sharing the same enclosed space for one hundred days — and what happened inside completely changed how I think about keeping these plants forever. 📌 WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED: → Two plants caught the same prey simultaneously on Day 35 → Venus Flytrap got measurably faster at hunting over 100 days → Pitcher Plant developed its own living micro-ecosystem inside its trap → The ecosystem self-corrected a mold crisis without any help from me → One critical mistake on Day 70 nearly cost me the entire Venus Flytrap 📊 DAY 100 FINAL RESULTS: • Venus Flytrap: 6 traps → 15 traps, hunting speed improved 39% • Sundew: tripled in diameter, began catching prey 3x its normal size • Pitcher Plant: trap volume increased 4x, confirmed inquiline organisms • 800+ insects caught naturally across all three plants combined • Zero manual cleaning required for final 42 days 🌱 ABOUT WILDHATCH: WildHatch explores the most fascinating side of nature through hands-on experiments and ecosystem builds. New videos every week. ⏱ TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 — The Day 100 moment that started everything 1:30 — Building the ecosystem from scratch 5:00 — Day 1: First hunts 8:00 — Day 35: Something nobody expected 12:00 — Day 50 to 70: Growth, crisis and recovery 17:00 — Day 85: The micro-ecosystem discovery 20:00 — Day 100: The final test 22:30 — Results and 4 key lessons 📬 Subscribe: @WildHatch-z1o #CarnivorousPlants #TerrariumBuild #WildHatch #NatureExperiment ⚖️ DISCLAIMER This ecosystem was maintained following established carnivorous plant care guidelines throughout the entire hundred-day period. All feeder insects were standard commercially available feeder stock. No animals were introduced or harmed beyond their natural role as prey within this ecosystem. All biological and scientific information presented is based on established research. Content is for educational and entertainment purposes only.