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A very common butterwort (carnivorous plant) in wetter areas of the Gulf coastal plain. Always associated with glades and slow moving water locations.
On the edge of a pitcher plant. If it had landed on the hairy part, it would have been trapped, and then digested!
With regard to sundews in Western Australia it is redundant to call many species rare as there are so many locally endemic species. What is rare about these photos is capturing flowering plants of D monticola which are quite underrepresented in literature and on the net.
Droera monticola is restricted to several high elevation peaks in the Stirling Range north of Esperance in WA. For this hike all flowers were closed during the ascent, but a few began to open with enough sun during the descent of the mountain - allowing for these few photos.
Round-leaved Sundew (Drosera rotundifolia) - close-up of flowering stalk.
Photographed at Rocher Bog, near High Bradfield in South Yorkshire.
The carnivorous plant, Drosera cistiflora, is a South African sundew which captures and digests small insects on tentacled leaves covered in and enzyme-rich mucilaginous exudate. Many sundew species exhibit some slow leaf movement and will wrap around larger prey items. Drosera cistiflora is known for large showy flowers with a rainbow of different color variants. This white flower form is considered the "type-variant" which was originally described for the species in the 1800's. These plants are quite showy and for this trip many were in full bloom.
What truly makes Roridula dentata interesting is the symbiotic or mutualistic relationship with the assassin bug Pameridea marlothi, also known as the northern dewstick bug. The Pameridia insects are adapted to move freely through the sticky resin of the Roridula with specialized feet and an exoskeleton covered by a greasy substance that resists the adhesion of the Roridula glue-like secretions. The Pameridia then feeds on insects captured by Roridula and excretes waste products onto the leaf surface that are absorbed into the plant for nutrition.
Equally as interesting, this Pameridia bug lives nowhere else but on the Roridula - an obligate mutualistic relationship. In these images multiple adult bugs are presented along with an immature insect feeding on a captured wasp.
Within a few km of the previous posts of "type-form" of Drosera cistiflora. Note the increased red to the vegetative portions of these plants compared to the other posted plants from a nearby popeulation. this species is highly variable in lkeaf/stem morphology, plant color, and flower color.
Drosera cistiflora is a widespread highly variable and polymorphic species of sundew from the western Cape region of South Africa. there is tremendous variation in flower size and color as well as stem and leaf morphology. For this region, there are current research efforts to identify and reclassify this 'species' into multiple classifications. The late afternoon light provided a spectacular setting for these images.
What truly makes Roridula dentata interesting is the symbiotic or mutualistic relationship with the assassin bug Pameridea marlothi, also known as the northern dewstick bug. The Pameridia insects are adapted to move freely through the sticky resin of the Roridula with specialized feet and an exoskeleton covered by a greasy substance that resists the adhesion of the Roridula glue-like secretions. The Pameridia then feeds on insects captured by Roridula and excretes waste products onto the leaf surface that are absorbed into the plant for nutrition.
Equally as interesting, this Pameridia bug lives nowhere else but on the Roridula - an obligate mutualistic relationship. In these images multiple adult bugs are presented along with an immature insect feeding on a captured wasp.
A rare and spectacular endemic plant to South Africa, Roridula dentata superficially resembles sundews of the genus Drosera. Roridula dentata and R gorgonias are the two extant species of this carnivorous plant genus found only in South Africa. Roridula spp have several somewhat unique features that separates them from the similar appearing sundews (Drosera spp.).
Roridula, despite the sticky stalked glands similar to the sundews, produces no digestive enzymes - the sticky leaves only serve to trap insects. Rather than digesting these captured insects with enzymes, Roridula spp. host several species of bugs of the genus Pameridea forming a symbiotic relationship in which the bugs feed on trapped insects and excrete waste on the plant leaves that in turn are absorbed as nutrients for the plant. Therefore, rather than truly carnivorous, Roridula would be considered a protocarnivorous plant in that the nutrient assimilation results from the work of a symbiotic insect. My next post will address the insect life on these plants.
The second and perhaps most fascinating aspect of Roridula spp. is the fact that the genus is believed to be related to the most ancient remains of a carnivorous plant in the fossil record - amber encapulated leaves very similar to modern Roridula found in amber mines at Kaliningrad, Russia. These amber specimens are dated to between 35-50 million years old. The plants which we see today may have changed very little since the time of the last dinosaurs and the beginning of the age of mammals.
I found this flower in the insectivorous plant house in the Botanical garden at Oxford. It was in the presence of pitcher plants but I am not sure if it belonged to them. Can anyone identify it for me please?
With regard to sundews in Western Australia it is redundant to call many species rare as there are so many locally endemic species. What is rare about these photos is capturing flowering plants of D monticola which are quite underrepresented in literature and on the net.
Droera monticola is restricted to several high elevation peaks in the Stirling Range north of Esperance in WA. For this hike all flowers were closed during the ascent, but a few began to open with enough sun during the descent of the mountain - allowing for these few photos.