Drosera heterophylla Species Profile
Drosera heterophylla is an erect tuberous species endemic to Western Australia. It is associated with winter-waterlogged niches such as swamps and the drainage channels of granite outcrops in the Swan…
Drosera heterophylla is an erect tuberous species endemic to Western Australia. It is associated with winter-waterlogged niches such as swamps and the drainage channels of granite outcrops in the Swan…
Drosera erythrorhiza is a species of tuberous rosetted sundew that is widespread in the coastal south west of Western Australia. It is a variable species the grows in an wide…
Drosera erythrogyne is the longest species of sundew, with stems that are known to grow three meters long! It is bright green and glabrous except for the sepals, which have…
Drosera drummondii is a scrambling species of tuberous sundew native to Western Australia. The plant grows a long glabrous stem, which can reach over a meter in length. The leaves…
Drosera coomallo is a pygmy sundew with orange flowers. It is named after the Coomallo region where it is common. Drosera coomallo has a flat rosette of leaves that grows…
Drosera collina is a large rosetted tuberous species endemic to Western Australia. It can be distinguished from other members of the Drosera erythrorhiza complex, its numerous leaves (typically 10-12), which…
Drosera androsacea is a pygmy species native to the inland south west of Western Australia. It actively grows during winter, before forming a pentagonal stack of stipular buds as the…
In the volcanic fields of the Tongariro alpine national park grows a diminutive form of Drosera spatulata. This form is truly adapted to an alpine lifestyle, growing 1,200 m asl…
In Hong Kong and Macau, two coastal cities situated at the mouth of the Pearl River Delta, grow interesting examples of plants in the Drosera spatulata complex. Drosera spatulata -…
The tuberous Drosera are comparatively uncommon in cultivation, perhaps owing to the difficulty of raising seed-grown plants to maturity. Little is known about their propagation, although scattered experiments suggest that…