Tough napisał(a):odbiegnę troche od tematu i zapytam. pietruszka, skąd masz swoją cayennensis?
The only other Drosera taxon in Brazil south of the Amazon Basin that may have eglandular-pilose inflorescences is D. cayennensis Sagot ex Diels, here including as its synonyms D. colombiana Fernández-Pérez, D. panamensis Correa & A.S.Taylor, D. pumilla, and D. sanariapoana Steyermark. The indumentum of the scapes is very variable for this species and has been one of the main characters used by taxonomists in attempts to separate D. cayennensis into the different taxa here listed as synonyms. While in some populations only eglandular hairs are present on the scapes, others will have glandular hairs only—or even both. One of these D. cayennensis collections with eglandular-pilose indumentum from the Chapada dos Guimarães (Mato Grosso state, western Brazil) was mistakenly identified as D. montana var. schwackei by Silva (1994) and Silva & Giulietti (1997) and as D. montana by Correa & Silva (2005), but is easily differentiated from either by its spatulate-obovate to spatulate-cuneate leaves in flat rosettes and fragile flower scapes usually no longer than 10cm with only 1-5 flowers.
Drosera schwackei flowers from around March to April, which corresponds to the late wet season/early dry season (or late summer/early autumn). This is a rather unusual flowering period among Brazilian Drosera species, especially for a perennial that does not go dormant. The only other taxon that flowers around this same time of year in Brazil south of the Amazon Basin is D. cayennensis Sagot ex Diels. Similar to D. montana and D. hirtella, D. cayennensis also remains dormant as roots in the dry season, but usually flowers and loses its leaf rosettes earlier in the growing season than the former two species.
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