Drosera capillaris
Drosera capillaris, also known as the pink sundew, is a species of carnivorous plant belonging to the family Droseraceae. It is native to the southern United States, the Greater Antilles, western and southern Mexico, Central America, and northern South America.
Description
Drosera capillaris is a perennial and herbaceous plant which forms mostly prostrate rosettes. In more temperate regions, it grows as an annual. They can reach a diameter of at their largest. Individual leaf blades typically range from to in length. Their inflorescences can reach heights of to, forming a one sided raceme, with 1 to 6 pink, or rarely, white blooms. Flowers mature to an ovoid capsule, roughly long. They typically flower from May to August.D.capillaris can be confused with D.intermedia especially when young, as both form flat rosettes and inhabit the same habitats. However D.capillaris petioles are sparsely pilose, while D.intermedia is glabrous. Like all members of its genus, D.capillaris leaf blades are covered in glandular trichomes which excrete a sugary mucilage. Small invertebrates then become trapped by the hairs, and are subsequently digested by enzymes. The trichomes act similarly to tentacles, closing around trapped organisms further ensnaring them.