The Sundews (Drosera) comprise one of the largest genera of carnivorous plants, with over 170 species. These members of the family Droseraceae lure, capture, and digest insects using stalked mucilagenous glands covering their leaf surface. The insects are used to supplement the poor mineral nutrition that sundews are unable to obtain from the soil they grow in. Various species, which vary greatly in size and form, can be found growing natively on every continent except Antarctica.
Both the botanical name (from the Greek δρόσος: "drosos" = "dew, dewdrops") as well as the English common name (sundew) refer to the glistening drops of mucilage at the tip each tentacle that resemble drops of morning dew.
Sundews are perennial (or rarely annual) herbacious (nonwoody) plants, forming prostrate or upright rosettes between 1 centimeters (0.4 in.) and 1 meter (39 in.) in height, depending on the species. Climbing species form scrambling stems which can reach much longer lengths, up to 3 meters (10 ft.) in the case of D. erythrogyna. Sundews have been shown to be able to achieve a lifespan of 50 years. The genus is so specialized for nutrient uptake through its carnivory that in at least the case of pygmy sundews it is missing the enzymes (nitrate reductase in particular ) that plants usually use for the uptake of earth-bound nitrates.
The genus can be divided into several growth forms:
Although they don't form a single strictly defined growthform, a number of species are often put together in a further group:
The root system of most Drosera is only weakly developed. It serves mainly to absorb water to and anchor the plant to the ground; the roots are relatively useless when it comes to nutrient uptake. A few South African species use their roots for water and food storage. Some Australian species form underground corms for this purpose, which also serve to allow the plants to survive dry summers. The roots of pygmy sundews are often extremely long in proportion to their size, with a 1 centimeter (0.4 in.) plant extending roots over 15 centimeters (6 in.) beneath the soil surface. Some pygmy sundews, such as D. lasiantha and D. scorpiodes, also form adventitious roots as supports.
Sundews are characterised by the glandular tentacles, topped with sticky secretions, that cover their laminas. The trapping and digestion mechanism usually employs two types of glands: stalked glands that secrete sweet mucilage to attract and ensnare insects and enzymes to digest them, and sessile glands that absorb the resulting nutrient soup (the latter glands are missing in some species, such as D. erythrorhiza). Small prey, mainly consisting of insects, are attracted by the sweet secretions of the peduncular glands. Upon touching these, however, they become entrapped by sticky mucilage which prevents their progress or escape. Eventually, the prey either succumb to death through exhaustion or asphyxiation as the mucilage envelops them and clogs their spiracles. Death usually occurs within one quarter of an hour. The plant meanwhile secretes enzymes such as esterase, peroxidase, phosphatase and protease. These enzymes both dissolve the insect and free the contained nutrients. The nutrient soup is then absorbed through the leaf surface and can then be used to help fuel plant growth.
All species of sundew are able to move their tentacles in response to contact with digestible prey. The tentacles are extremely sensitive and will bend toward the center of the leaf in order to bring the insect into contact with as many stalked glands as possible. According to Charles Darwin, the contact of the legs of a small gnat with a single tentacle is enough to induce this response . This response to touch is known as thigmotropism, and is quite rapid in some species. The outer tentacles of D. burmannii and D. sessilifolia can bend inwards toward prey in a matter of seconds after contact, while D. glanduligera is known to envelop its prey with tentacles in a mere second in optimal environmental conditions. In addition to tentacle movement, some species are able to bend their laminas to various degrees in order to maximize contact with the prey. Of these, D. capensis exhibits what is probably the most dramatic movement, curling its leaf completely around prey in 12-72 hours. Some species, such as D. filiformis, are unable to bend their leaves in response to prey.
The leaf morphology of the species within the genus is extremely varied, ranging from the sessile Leaf morphology no title.png leaves of D. erythrorhiza to the bipinnately divided Leaf morphology no title.png leaves of D. binata.
The flowers of sundews, as with nearly all carnivorous plants, are held far above the leaves by a long stem in order to avoid trapping potential pollinators. The mostly unforked inflorescences are spikes, whose flowers open one at a time and usually only are open for a short period. Flowers open in response to light intensity (often opening only in direct sunlight), and the entire inflorescence is also helitropic, moving in response to the sun's position in the sky.
The radially symmetrical (actinomorphous) flowers are always perfect and have five parts (the exceptions to this rule are the four-petaled D. pygmaea and the eight to twelve-petaled D. heterophylla). Most of the species have small flowers (<1.5 cm. or 0.6 in.). A few species, however, such as D. regia and D. cistiflora, have flowers 4 centimeters (1.5 in.) or more in diameter. In general, the flowers are white or pink. Australian species display a wider range of colors, including orange (D. callistos), red (D. adelae), yellow (D. zigzagia) or metallic violet colored (D. microphylla).
The ovary is superior and develops into a dehiscent seed capsule bearing numerous tiny seeds.
Vegetative reproduction occurs naturally in some species that produce stolons. Pygmy sundews reproduce asexually using specialized scale-like leaves called gemmae. Tuberous sundews can produce offsets from their corms.
In culture, sundews can often be propagated through leaf, crown, or root cuttings, as well as through seeds.
Europe is home to only three species: D. intermedia, D. anglica, and D. rotundifolia. Where the ranges of the two latter species overlap, they sometimes hybridize to form the sterile D. × obovata. In addition to the three species and the hybrid native to Europe, North America is also home to four additional species; D. brevifolia is a small annual native to coastal states from Texas to Virginia, while D. capillaris, a slightly larger plant with a similar range, is also found in areas of the Caribbean. A third species, D. linearis, is native to the northern United States and southern Canada. D. filiformis has two subspecies native to the East Coast, the Gulf Coast, and the Florida panhandle.
This genus is often descriped as cosmopolitan, meaning that it has worldwide distribution. The botanist Ludwig Diels, author of the only Monograph of the family to date, called this description an "arrant misjudgment of this genus' highly unusual distributional circumstances" („arge Verkennung ihrer höchst eigentümlichen Verbreitungsverhältnisse“), while admitting that sundew species do "occupy a significant part of the Earth's surface" („einen beträchtlichen Teil der Erdoberfläche besetzt“).Diels, Ludwig: Droseraceae, in Engler, A. (Hrsg.): Pflanzenr. 4, 112 : 109, 1906 He particularly pointed to the absence of Drosera species from almost all arid climate zones, countless rainforests, the American Pacific Coast, Polynesia, the Mediterranean, and North Africa, as well as the scarcity of species diversity in temperate zones such as Europe and North America.
That being said, the genus is very variable in terms of habitat. Individual sundew species have adapted to a wide variety of environments, including atypical habitats such as rainforests, deserts (ex. D. burmannii and D. indica), and even highly shaded environments (Queensland Sundews). The temperate species, which form hibernacula in the winter, are an example of such adaptation to habitats; in general, sundews tend to prefer warm climates, and are only moderately frost-resistant.
In South Africa and Australia, two of the three centers of special diversity, the natural habitats of these plants are undergoing a high degree of pressure from human activities. Expanding population centers (such as Queensland, Perth, , and Cape Town) threaten many such habitats, as does the draining of moist areas for agriculture and forestry in rural areas. The droughts that have been sweeping Australia over the last ten years, which likely are a result of Global Warming, also pose a threat to many species by drying up previously moist areas.
Those species that are endemic to a very limited area are often most threatened by the collection of plants from the wild. D. madagascariensis is considered endangered in Madagascar because of the largescale removal of plants from the wild for exportation; 10 - 200 million plants are harvested for commercial medicinal use annually.Obermeyer, A.A.: The Flora of Southern Africa Vol. 13.
Sundews were used as medicinal herbs as early as the 12th century, when an Italian doctor from the School of Salerno by the name of Matthaeus Platearius described the plant as an herbal remedy for coughs under the name "herba sole". It has been used commonly in cough preparations in Germany and elswhere in Europe. Sundew tea was especially recommended by herbalists for dry coughs, bronchitis, whooping cough, asthma and "bronchial cramps". Schilcher H, Elzer M. Drosera (Sundew): A proven antitussive Zeitschrift Phytotherapie, 1993;14:50;4.
A modern study has shown that Drosera does exhibit antitussive properties. Oliver-Bever B. Plants in Tropical West Africa. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1986: 129. Sundews have also been used as an aphrodisiac and to strengthen the heart, as well as to treat sunburn and prevent freckles. They are still used today in some 200-300 registered medications, usually in combination with other active ingredients. Today Drosera is usually used to treat ailments such as asthma, coughs, lung infections, and stomach ulcers.
Medicinal preparations are primarily made using the roots, flowers, and fruit-like capsules.Wichtl M.; Herbal Drugs and Phytopharmacetuicals; Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1994, 178;81. Since all native sundews species are protected in many parts of Europe and North America, extracts are usually prepared using cultivated fast-growing sundews (specifically D. rotundifolia, D. intermedia, D. anglica, D. ramentacea and D. madagascariensis) or from plants collected and imported from Madagascar, Spain, France, Poland and the Baltics.
The more difficult species of sundews are also cultivated by a group of several thousand carnivorous plant enthusiasts world wide; virtually every species can be found in cultivation. Since many sundew species are only found in small numbers in a very limited range in the wild, several species have been threatened by aggressive collection of plant material for cultivation.
Cultivation requirements vary greatly by species. In general, however, sundews require a high environmental moisture content, usually in the form of a constantly moist or wet soil substrate. Most species also require this water to be pure, as nutrients, salts, or minerals in their soil can stunt or kill them. Commonly plants are grown in a soil substrate containing some combination of dead or live sphagnum moss, sphagnum peat moss, sand, and/or perlite, and are watered with distilled, RO, or rain water.
For a complete list of species, see the separate article List of Drosera species.
The following cladogram shows the relationship between various subgenera and classes as defined by the Rivadavia et al.'s analysis in 2002. The monotypic section "Meristocaules" was not included in the study, so that its place in this system is unclear. More recent studies have placed this group near section "Bryastrum", so it is placed there below. Since the section "Drosera" is polyphyletic, it shows up multiple times in the cladogram (
This phylogenetic study has made the need for a revision of the genus even clearer.
┌─── Section Drosera
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