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- Q290528 subject Q7154983.
- Q290528 subject Q8344729.
- Q290528 subject Q8345504.
- Q290528 subject Q8461945.
- Q290528 subject Q8765550.
- Q290528 abstract "Drosera kenneallyi is a carnivorous plant in the genus Drosera and is endemic to the Kimberley region in northern Western Australia. Its leaves are arranged in a compact basal rosette appressed to the soil. Narrowly oblanceolate petioles emerging from the center of the rosette are typically 1.5–2.2 mm wide at their widest. Red carnivorous leaves at the end of the petioles are small at 2–3 mm in diameter and elliptic to broadly ovate. Inflorescences are 12.5–20.5 cm (5–8 in) long with white flowers being produced on 10- to 20-flowered racemes from November to December. Drosera kenneallyi is found in sandy loam soils on the margins of the Airfield Swamp. The type material was collected under a Eucalyptus latifolia near the Airfield Swamp. During January and February, this species is frequently flooded with high-temperature water. It survives these conditions by altering the position of its petioles with the rise and fall of the surrounding water. This allows the insect-catching leaves to remain above the water's surface.Drosera kenneallyi is native to the Mitchell Plateau in the Kimberley region of northern Western Australia and is common within a 5 km (3.1 mi) radius around the Mitchell Plateau Airfield. It was first collected in 1982 by Kevin F. Kenneally, for whom this species is named. In 1993, Allen Lowrie traveled to the Kimberley with the Landscope expedition and collected this species, introducing it into cultivation. It was only then confirmed that D. kenneallyi is a distinct species from the other members of Drosera subgenus Lasiocephala. Lowrie formally described this species in a 1996 issue of Nuytsia, the journal of the Western Australian Herbarium. In his description, he noted that D. kenneallyi is most closely related to D. falconeri, which is found in similar habitats. Drosera kenneallyi can be distinguished from D. falconeri by its noticeably smaller leaves and shorter inflorescence, but the two species share many characteristics.".
- Q290528 binomialAuthority Q705527.
- Q290528 class Q165468.
- Q290528 division Q25314.
- Q290528 family Q156185.
- Q290528 genus Q266.
- Q290528 genus Q5308553.
- Q290528 kingdom Q756.
- Q290528 order Q165468.
- Q290528 order Q21808.
- Q290528 thumbnail Drosera_kenneallyi_habitus.jpg?width=300.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q10289985.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q1131303.
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- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q156185.
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- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q165468.
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- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q21808.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q25314.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q266.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q3009446.
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- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q521246.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q5308553.
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- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q705527.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q7154983.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q753457.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q756.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q7987522.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q8344729.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q8345504.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461945.
- Q290528 wikiPageWikiLink Q8765550.
- Q290528 binomialAuthority Q705527.
- Q290528 familia Q156185.
- Q290528 genus "Drosera".
- Q290528 ordo Q21808.
- Q290528 regnum "Plantae".
- Q290528 subgenus "Lasiocephala".
- Q290528 unrankedClassis Q165468.
- Q290528 unrankedDivisio Q25314.
- Q290528 unrankedOrdo Q165468.
- Q290528 type Eukaryote.
- Q290528 type Plant.
- Q290528 type Species.
- Q290528 type Thing.
- Q290528 type Q19088.
- Q290528 type Q756.
- Q290528 comment "Drosera kenneallyi is a carnivorous plant in the genus Drosera and is endemic to the Kimberley region in northern Western Australia. Its leaves are arranged in a compact basal rosette appressed to the soil. Narrowly oblanceolate petioles emerging from the center of the rosette are typically 1.5–2.2 mm wide at their widest. Red carnivorous leaves at the end of the petioles are small at 2–3 mm in diameter and elliptic to broadly ovate.".
- Q290528 label "Drosera kenneallyi".
- Q290528 depiction Drosera_kenneallyi_habitus.jpg.