It is endemic to Western Australia and grows near swamps or granite outcrops in sand, clay, or laterite.
D. neesii produces small, cup-shaped carnivorous leaves in groups of three along stems that can be 15–60 cm (6–24 in) high.
[2][3] Drosera neesii was first described by Johann Georg Christian Lehmann in 1844.
The first infraspecific taxon was described when George Bentham reduced D. sulphurea to a variety, a decision which was later reversed.
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