Biology:Drosera erythrorhiza

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Short description: Species of carnivorous plant

Drosera erythrorhiza
DroseraErythrorhiza.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Droseraceae
Genus: Drosera
Subgenus: Drosera subg. Ergaleium
Section: Drosera sect. Erythrorhiza
Species:
D. erythrorhiza
Binomial name
Drosera erythrorhiza
Subspecies
  • D. erythrorhiza subsp. collina N.G.Marchant & Lowrie
  • D. erythrorhiza subsp. erythrorhiza Lindl.
  • D. erythrorhiza subsp. magna N.G.Marchant & Lowrie
  • D. erythrorhiza subsp. squamosa (Benth.) N.G.Marchant & Lowrie
Synonyms
  • D. primulacea Schlotth.
  • Sondera erythrorhiza (Lindl.) Chrtek & Slavíková

Drosera erythrorhiza, the red ink sundew,[1] is a perennial tuberous species in the carnivorous plant genus Drosera that is endemic to Western Australia. It grows in a rosette and is distinguished from the other species in section Erythrorhiza by its many-flowered cymose inflorescences with up to 50 individual flowers. D. erythrorhiza was first described by John Lindley in his 1839 publication A sketch of the vegetation of the Swan River Colony. In 1992, N. G. Marchant and Allen Lowrie described three new subspecies, thus also creating the autonym D. erythrorhiza subsp. erythrorhiza.[2] The subspecies were separated from this variable species mostly by leaf morphology and distribution.[2][3]

D. erythrorhiza subsp. collina is named for its native hilly habitat and typically has more leaves of various shapes within the same rosette. D. erythrorhiza subsp. erythrorhiza has fewer, wider leaves as compared to D. erythrorhiza subsp. magna, which has larger (wider) leaves and frequently has more of them. Finally, D. erythrorhiza subsp. squamosa was originally described by George Bentham in 1864 at the species rank as Drosera squamosa. Marchant and Lowrie reduced it to the subspecies rank under D. erythrorhiza. Subspecies squamosa differs from subsp. erythrorhiza in the appearance of red leaf margins caused by the dense red tentacles.[2][3] Earlier, in his 1906 taxonomic monograph of the Droseraceae, Ludwig Diels introduced a new variety, D. erythrorhiza var. imbecilla.[4]

A competing taxonomy was developed and introduced by Jindřich Chrtek and Zdeňka Slavíková in 1999 where the authors argue for the reclassification of the tuberous Drosera (encompassing all of Drosera subgenus Ergaleium) into Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's 1844 genus Sondera that had been reduced to a synonym of Drosera. In doing so, Chrtek and Slavíková elevated Marchant and Lowrie's subspecies and established the following species: Sondera collina, S. erythrorhiza, S. magna, and S. squamosa.[5] This reclassification, however, is not widely followed.

See also

References

  1. "Drosera erythrorhiza". FloraBase. Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife. https://florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au/browse/profile/3095. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Marchant, N. and A. Lowrie. 1992. New names and new combinations in 34 taxa of Western Australian tuberous and pygmy Drosera. Kew Bulletin, 47(2): 315-328.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Rice, Barry. 2008. The tuberous rosetted Drosera. The Carnivorous Plant FAQ v. 11.5. Accessed online: 21 February 2009.
  4. Diels, L. 1906. Droseraceae In Engler, A. Das Pflanzenreich. IV. 112.
  5. Chrtek, J. and Z. Slavíková. 1999. Genera and families of the Droserales order. Novit. Bot. Univ. Carol. 13: 39-46.

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q5308518 entry