Drosera ordensis

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Drosera ordensis
D. ordensis in cultivation
D. ordensis in cultivation
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Droseraceae
Genus: Drosera
Species: D. ordensis
Binomial name
Drosera ordensis
Lowrie (1994)

Drosera ordensis is a species of sundew, native to Australia and part of the "petiolaris complex" of sundews making up the section Lasiocephala. Compared to many periolaris sundews, it has wide petioles, which are densely covered in silvery hair. It usually forms rosettes 8 cm across, although plants up to 20 cm in diameter have been reported.[1]

[edit] Description

D. ordensis flower
D. ordensis flower

A perennial rosette-forming herb, D. ordensis forms clumps of stemless or nearly stemless rosettes. Each plant has numerous leaves, which as typical for the complex consist of a long, hairy petiole supporting a nearly round lamina. The lamina is densely studded with stalked mucilagenous glands, which serve to attract and trap arthropod prey, which is subsequently digested and absorbed by the plant as a source of nutrients. During the dry season, the plant produces smaller somewhat dormant leaves which are protected by their dense covering of silvery hairs.

D. ordensis flowers from December through April. Flowers form on a crowded raceme, opening singly. The five-petaled flowers can be pink to nearly white and are about 1.5 cm in diameter.[1]

D. ordensis distribution
D. ordensis distribution

[edit] Distribution and habitat

D. ordensis inhabits sandy soils near sandstone outcrops in the northeaster tip of Western Australia near Kununurra and Pago and in the neighboring region of the Northern Territory in Keep River National Park. The plant is often associated with Sorghum species.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Lowrie, Allen (1998); Carnivorous Plants of Australia, Volume III; University of Western Australia Press.
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