In my experience the plants prefer cool temperatures. They are adaptable to all levels of light, but they have to adjust slowly over time. I have grown them outdoors in full sun where they get tougher, thicker leaves almost purple, with red glands. I also have grown them in very low light, but in this case they are much softer, and tend to grow for awhile, flower and die as individual rosettes, returning from the roots to repeat this cycle.
I am reassessing the need for the Queensland species to have consistently high humidity (as in a sealed terrarium), and currently am growing both D. adelae and D. schizandra under lights on my rack, the same as any other of my Drosera, between 40-80% humidity, in the same conditions as Dionaea. I did this over time, opening the terrarium more often until I did away with the cover, eventually putting the plant outside the tank for longer periods. If it looked stressed, I returned it to the terrarium. After a few weeks , the older leaves withered, but the new growth was more compact, dewey and just looked stronger. The glass of the terrarium was no longer cutting off desired light spectrum, circulating air made the leaves tougher, and heat build up was largely done away with. I think they need to get a little tough in order for the leaves to persist, otherwise they quickly rot away, like wet tissue paper. I try to strike a happy medium between the dim, humid conditions of the tank, and the harsh, full sun outdoor conditions that produce tough, small plants. Toughened plants as above enjoy morning and late afternoon full sun when possible, but are protected from the intense noonday sun. Still, even these stronger individual rosettes often died back after flowering. It may be this is just their nature.
The Queensland plants may in fact respond to very dilute fertilizers. We had a good discussion on this awhile back. If you consider that these are woodland species often growing beneath trees, you can see that there would be rain washing bird droppings onto the plants in the rainy season, and some experiments done by Pinguiculaman so far seem to support this. These plants would be covered with litter in habitat. Fertilizing plants should probably be avoided by new growers with few spare plants and care must be taken when fertilizing any CP species, of course, but experiments like this should be encouraged (once you have spares, that is!). For those who do wish to experiment, PM me for details of how to proceed. It would be good if some other growers could confirm Joseph's positive reports.
Maybe some of our Australian members could describe the Queensland climate a little? Is there a noted change between the wet and dry season? A period of restricted rain fall? I have always noticed how all the Queensland Drosera seem to prosper and wane in a cyclic (and frustrating) way, and wonder if this might not be due to them not having the proper conditions during any "rest" that they might experience. I wonder if they might not need a drier medium when they are not in rapid growth, to toughen the roots and possibly even "prune" them. This species will make so many plantletts, it may be that individuals just exhaust themselves (especially when grown without nutrition, in low light in a sealed terrarium).