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Mystery as hundreds of Venus flytraps stolen from conservation land

Digging up the plants and removing them is a felony in North Carolina

Ap Correspondent
Monday 04 March 2024 18:09 EST
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Hundreds of Venus flytraps were stolen
Hundreds of Venus flytraps were stolen

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Police are hunting for two people accused of stealing hundreds of Venus flytraps.

Authorities in North Carolina have obtained arrest warrants for two people in a poaching case involving hundreds of the plants.

Officers with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission obtained arrest warrants for two people accused of stealing nearly 600 of the rare plants from conservation land in Boiling Spring Lakes, WECT-TV reported.

It is not clear if the people have been arrested and authorities with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission have not returned messages left by The Associated Press.

Venus flytraps are native to southeastern North Carolina.

Venus flytraps ar sold on the black market
Venus flytraps ar sold on the black market (Getty)

“They only grow naturally within a 100-mile radius of Wilmington,” Sgt. Matt Criscoe with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission told the news station.

“This time of year they start to bud flowers,” making it easier to find them and prompting increased patrols for poachers, Criscoe said.

He said the plants are sold on the black market or locally.

Wildlife officers responded to a complaint last month about two people digging for flytraps in Boiling Spring Lakes. They were stopped at a local gas station and officers searched their backpacks. They’re accused of harvesting more than 590 plants, Criscoe said.

The accused have not been publicly identified.

Digging up the plants and removing them from public land or land held privately by another person is a felony in North Carolina.

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