Drosera scorpioides

Drosera scorpioides, commonly called the shaggy sundew, is a pygmy sundew native to the Jarrah Forest region and southern coasts of Southwest Australia.

[1] Notable for its unusually large size relative to other pygmy sundews, D. scorpioides can produce rosettes measuring up to two inches in diameter and specimens may attain a height of up to 100 millimeters (approximately 3.9 inches).

The flowers are pink and white, appearing sometime between August and October.

[1] Depending on the form, D. scorpioides can be expected to live up to seven years.

You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Western Australian plant article is a stub.

Range of D. scorpioides in the wild.
Closeup of a single leaf.