Sandy Tate River, N. Queensland, Australia | Original ID: D2410
From my notes: These are quite hairy and have really cool orange colored traps. Most rosettes tend to be flatter and overall diameter is slightly smaller than the other lanata. Leaves tend to be pale green as they first emerge. In most conditions, they keep the pale green and slightly shift yellow-orange as they age. Increased lighting will introduce more color variety with the leaves mixing pale green, orange, yellow, and red.
The 3 lanata clones are the most distinct petiolaris complex varieties I have. I could randomly mix them unlabeled with other petiolaris complex Drosera and you could definitively say this is 2, this is 1, this is 3, etc.Â
There is a smmaalllllll chance I bought this clone because of the name. I mean, I would have gotten it regardless because there aren't very many D. lanata clones in circulation. Do I still laugh a little every time I see it? Yea......
*** June 2026 Classification Update - Clone was added to inventory post update. ***