There is no translation, it is not used in Spanish. You would have to speak English if you want to say 'Venus Flytrap'.
Yes, it would.
The Plantae Kingdom.
The scientific name for the venus flytrap is Dionaea muscipula.It belongs in the kingdom Plantae, division Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Caryophyllales, family Droseraceae, genus Dionaea.Dionaea Muscipula
No. A Venus's flytrap is a plant and therefore primarily a producer since it photosynthesises. You could say it 'eats' insects too, but that would make it a carnivore.
No, it is just a trap and not a very brutal one, just enough to hold a fly. In order for the plant to hurt you, you would have to leave you finger (or whatever) in the trap until the digestive enzymes have a chance to burn through your epidermis, which would be days. Also, the plant does not have teeth really. They only can put out enough pressure to crush their prey.
The Venus flytrap is an angiosperm. Angiosperms are defined as flowering plants that have their seeds inside ovules. The Venus flytrap is a carnivore. A gymnosperm does not have its seeds in an ovule. An example would be a pine cone.
Yes, "Venus flytrap" should be capitalized because it is a proper noun.
Yes it would because it eats insects and flies.
A Venus flytrap would be placed at the primary consumer level in a trophic level pyramid because it consumes insects as its primary source of nutrition. This places it one level above producers (plants) and below secondary consumers such as birds or frogs that may feed on the Venus flytrap.
It is unlikely that would ever happen.
If a twig or stone landed on a Venus Flytrap it would most probably close up or get crushed depending on the size of the twig/stone. It wouldn't eat it because it is not edible.