Difference between revisions of "Adiantum"

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 2: 1094. 1753; Gen. Pl. ed 5, 485. 1754.

Common names: Maidenhair fern
Etymology: Greek adiantos, unwetted, for the glabrous leaves, which shed raindrops
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2.
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--><span class="statement" id="st-d0_s0" data-properties="plant growth form or habitat;plant growth form or habitat"><b>Plants </b>terrestrial or on rock.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s1" data-properties="stem height or length or size;stem orientation;stem orientation;stem architecture"><b>Stems </b>short to long-creeping or suberect, branched;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s2" data-properties="scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale coloration;scale shape;scale shape;scale shape;margin architecture;margin architecture;margin architecture;margin architecture;margin architecture">scales deep tawny yellow to dark reddish-brown [black], concolored or bicolored, linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, margins entire, erose-ciliate, or minutely dentate.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s3" data-properties="leaf architecture;leaf growth form;leaf arrangement;leaf arrangement;leaf arrangement;leaf some measurement"><b>Leaves </b>monomorphic to somewhat dimorphic, densely clustered to closely spaced [distant], 15–110 cm.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s4" data-properties="petiole coloration;petiole coloration;petiole coloration;petiole coloration;petiole pubescence;petiole pubescence;petiole pubescence;petiole pubescence;petiole pubescence;groove count"><b>Petiole </b>chestnut-brown to dark purple or blackish, with single groove adaxially, glabrous, hispid, or strigose, with 1 or 2 vascular-bundles.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s5" data-properties="blade shape;blade shape;blade shape;blade shape;blade shape;blade shape;blade architecture or shape;blade texture;blade texture;blade texture;surface pubescence;surface reflectance;surface reflectance;surface coloration or pubescence or relief"><b>Blade </b>lanceolate, ovate, trowel-shaped, or fan-shaped, 1–4 (–9) -pinnate proximally, membranaceous to papery, both surfaces commonly glabrous (2 species with scattered hairs), adaxially dull or shiny, not striate;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s6" data-properties="rachis course;rachis course">rachis straight or flexuous.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s7" data-properties="ultimate segment architecture;ultimate segment architecture;ultimate segment architecture;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment shape;ultimate segment width"><b>Ultimate </b>segments subsessile to short-stalked (stalks terminating in cupulelike swelling at base of pinna in A. tenerum), round, fan-shaped, rhombic, or oblong, 3–29 mm wide;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s8" data-properties="base shape;base shape;base shape;base fusion">base truncate to cuneate, free from costa;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s9" data-properties="stalk coloration;stalk reflectance">stalk dark, often lustrous;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s10" data-properties="segment reproduction;marginal lobe orientation">fertile segments with marginal lobes recurved to form false indusia.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s11" data-properties="vein prominence;vein fusion;vein architecture or shape;vein arrangement"><b>Veins </b>of ultimate segments conspicuous, free, ± dichotomously forking near base and well above segment base [anastomosing in a few tropical species], parallel distally.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s12" data-properties="false indusium coloration;false indusium coloration;false indusium coloration;false indusium coloration;false indusium size or width;false indusium width;false indusium position"><b>False </b>indusia light gray-green or brown to dark-brown, narrow, 0.6–1 mm wide, marginal, concealing sporangia until sporangia dehisce.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s13" data-properties="sporangium position;abaxial surface count"><b>Sporangia </b>submarginal, borne along or sometimes also between veins on abaxial surface of false indusium, paraphyses and glands absent.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s14" data-properties="spore coloration;spore coloration;spore shape;spore architecture;spore relief;spore relief;spore relief;spore relief"><b>Spores </b>yellow or yellowish-brown, tetrahedral-globose, trilete, rugulate to rugose or tuberculate, equatorial-ridge absent.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s15" data-properties="equatorial-ridge count;x chromosome count;x chromosome count">x = 29, 30.</span><!--
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--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Plants </b>terrestrial or on rock. <b>Stems</b> short- to long-creeping or suberect, branched; scales deep tawny yellow to dark reddish brown [black], concolored or bicolored, linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, margins entire, erose-ciliate, or minutely dentate. <b>Leaves</b> monomorphic to somewhat dimorphic, densely clustered to closely spaced [distant], 15–110 cm. <b>Petiole</b> chestnut brown to dark purple or blackish, with single groove adaxially, glabrous, hispid, or strigose, with 1 or 2 vascular bundles. <b>Blade</b> lanceolate, ovate, trowel-shaped, or fan-shaped, 1–4(–9)-pinnate proximally, membranaceous to papery, both surfaces commonly glabrous (2 species with scattered hairs), adaxially dull or shiny, not striate; rachis straight or flexuous. <b>Ultimate</b> segments subsessile to short-stalked (stalks terminating in cupulelike swelling at base of pinna in <i>A. tenerum</i>), round, fan-shaped, rhombic, or oblong, 3–29 mm wide; base truncate to cuneate, free from costa; stalk dark, often lustrous; fertile segments with marginal lobes recurved to form false indusia. <b>Veins</b> of ultimate segments conspicuous, free, ± dichotomously forking near base and well above segment base [anastomosing in a few tropical species], parallel distally. <b>False</b> indusia light gray-green or brown to dark brown, narrow, 0.6–1 mm wide, marginal, concealing sporangia until sporangia dehisce. <b>Sporangia</b> submarginal, borne along or sometimes also between veins on abaxial surface of false indusium, paraphyses and glands absent. <b>Spores</b> yellow or yellowish brown, tetrahedral-globose, trilete, rugulate to rugose or tuberculate, equatorial ridge absent. <b>x</b> = 29, 30.</span><!--
  
 
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|distribution=Nearly worldwide except at latitudes greater than 60°.
 
|distribution=Nearly worldwide except at latitudes greater than 60°.
|discussion=<p>Most diverse in Andean South America, Adiantum is primarily a tropical genus; of the nine species occurring in the flora, A. melanoleucum, A. tenerum, and A. tricholepis are strictly subtropical. Adiantum hispidulum occurs only as an escape from cultivation. The genus is absent from dry areas in the interior of the continent.</p><!--
+
|discussion=<p>Most diverse in Andean South America, <i>Adiantum</i> is primarily a tropical genus; of the nine species occurring in the flora, <i>A. melanoleucum</i>, <i>A. tenerum</i>, and <i>A. tricholepis</i> are strictly subtropical. <i>Adiantum hispidulum</i> occurs only as an escape from cultivation. The genus is absent from dry areas in the interior of the continent.</p><!--
--><p>Adiantum is a very clearly circumscribed genus of ferns, the character state "sporangia borne on abaxial surface of false indusium" being both necessary and sufficient to define it. Within this large and widespread genus, however, species relationships are mostly unknown. An evolutionary classification of the group is indeed much needed (R. M. Tryon and A. F. Tryon 1982).</p><!--
+
--><p><i>Adiantum</i> is a very clearly circumscribed genus of ferns, the character state "sporangia borne on abaxial surface of false indusium" being both necessary and sufficient to define it. Within this large and widespread genus, however, species relationships are mostly unknown. An evolutionary classification of the group is indeed much needed (R. M. Tryon and A. F. Tryon 1982).</p><!--
 
--><p>Species ca. 150–200 (9 in the flora).</p>
 
--><p>Species ca. 150–200 (9 in the flora).</p>
 
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|publication year=1754
 
|publication year=1754
 
|special status=
 
|special status=
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-fine-grained-xml.git/src/287ef3db526bd807d435a3c7423ef2df1e951227/V2/V2_455.xml
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|source xml=https://bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation/src/2e0870ddd59836b60bcf96646a41e87ea5a5943a/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V2/V2_455.xml
 
|genus=Adiantum
 
|genus=Adiantum
|abaxial surface count=absent
 
|base fusion=free
 
|base shape=truncate;cuneate
 
|blade architecture or shape=1-4(-9)-pinnate
 
|blade shape=fan-shaped;trowel-shaped;fan-shaped;trowel-shaped;ovate;lanceolate
 
|blade texture=membranaceous;papery
 
|equatorial-ridge count=absent
 
|false indusium coloration=brown;dark-brown
 
|false indusium position=marginal
 
|false indusium size or width=narrow
 
|false indusium width=0.6mm;1mm
 
|groove count=single
 
|leaf architecture=monomorphic
 
|leaf arrangement=densely clustered;closely spaced
 
|leaf growth form=dimorphic
 
|leaf some measurement=15cm;110cm
 
|margin architecture=dentate;erose-ciliate;dentate;erose-ciliate;entire
 
|marginal lobe orientation=recurved
 
|petiole coloration=chestnut-brown;dark purple or blackish
 
|petiole pubescence=strigose;hispid;strigose;hispid;glabrous
 
|plant growth form or habitat=on rock;terrestrial
 
|rachis course=flexuous;straight
 
|scale coloration=tawny yellow;dark reddish-brown concolored or bicolored
 
|scale shape=linear-lanceolate;lanceolate
 
|segment reproduction=fertile
 
|sporangium position=submarginal
 
|spore architecture=trilete
 
|spore coloration=yellowish-brown;yellow
 
|spore relief=rugulate;rugose or tuberculate
 
|spore shape=tetrahedral-globose
 
|stalk coloration=dark
 
|stalk reflectance=lustrous
 
|stem architecture=branched
 
|stem height or length or size=short
 
|stem orientation=suberect;long-creeping
 
|surface coloration or pubescence or relief=not striate
 
|surface pubescence=glabrous
 
|surface reflectance=shiny;dull
 
|ultimate segment architecture=subsessile;short-stalked
 
|ultimate segment shape=oblong;rhombic;oblong;rhombic;fan-shaped;round
 
|ultimate segment width=3mm;29mm
 
|vein architecture or shape=forking
 
|vein arrangement=parallel
 
|vein fusion=free
 
|vein prominence=conspicuous
 
|x chromosome count=30;29
 
 
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Latest revision as of 20:23, 5 November 2020

Plants terrestrial or on rock. Stems short- to long-creeping or suberect, branched; scales deep tawny yellow to dark reddish brown [black], concolored or bicolored, linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, margins entire, erose-ciliate, or minutely dentate. Leaves monomorphic to somewhat dimorphic, densely clustered to closely spaced [distant], 15–110 cm. Petiole chestnut brown to dark purple or blackish, with single groove adaxially, glabrous, hispid, or strigose, with 1 or 2 vascular bundles. Blade lanceolate, ovate, trowel-shaped, or fan-shaped, 1–4(–9)-pinnate proximally, membranaceous to papery, both surfaces commonly glabrous (2 species with scattered hairs), adaxially dull or shiny, not striate; rachis straight or flexuous. Ultimate segments subsessile to short-stalked (stalks terminating in cupulelike swelling at base of pinna in A. tenerum), round, fan-shaped, rhombic, or oblong, 3–29 mm wide; base truncate to cuneate, free from costa; stalk dark, often lustrous; fertile segments with marginal lobes recurved to form false indusia. Veins of ultimate segments conspicuous, free, ± dichotomously forking near base and well above segment base [anastomosing in a few tropical species], parallel distally. False indusia light gray-green or brown to dark brown, narrow, 0.6–1 mm wide, marginal, concealing sporangia until sporangia dehisce. Sporangia submarginal, borne along or sometimes also between veins on abaxial surface of false indusium, paraphyses and glands absent. Spores yellow or yellowish brown, tetrahedral-globose, trilete, rugulate to rugose or tuberculate, equatorial ridge absent. x = 29, 30.

Distribution

Nearly worldwide except at latitudes greater than 60°.

Discussion

Most diverse in Andean South America, Adiantum is primarily a tropical genus; of the nine species occurring in the flora, A. melanoleucum, A. tenerum, and A. tricholepis are strictly subtropical. Adiantum hispidulum occurs only as an escape from cultivation. The genus is absent from dry areas in the interior of the continent.

Adiantum is a very clearly circumscribed genus of ferns, the character state "sporangia borne on abaxial surface of false indusium" being both necessary and sufficient to define it. Within this large and widespread genus, however, species relationships are mostly unknown. An evolutionary classification of the group is indeed much needed (R. M. Tryon and A. F. Tryon 1982).

Species ca. 150–200 (9 in the flora).

Key

1 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions of blades ± fan-shaped, rhombic, transversely oblong, or nearly round, about as long as broad. > 2
1 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions of blades ± oblong or long-triangular, at least 2 times as long as broad (rarely, reniform). > 5
2 Dark color of stalks extending into base of ultimate segments. Adiantum capillus-veneris
2 Dark color of stalks ending ± abruptly at base of ultimate segments. > 3
3 Segment stalks terminating in small, cupulelike swelling at base of ultimate segments. Adiantum tenerum
3 Segment stalks not terminating in small, cupulelike swelling at base of ultimate segments. > 4
4 Ultimate segments glabrous. Adiantum jordanii
4 Ultimate segments hirsute. Adiantum tricholepis
5 Rachises hispid or strigose; blades pinnate (occasionally pseudopedate in Adiantum hispidulum). > 6
5 Rachises glabrous; blades pseudopedate. > 7
6 Ultimate segments with scattered multicelled hairs; rachises hispid; false indusia ± round. Adiantum hispidulum
6 Ultimate segments glabrous; rachises strigose; false indusia crescent-shaped. Adiantum melanoleucum
7 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions of blades ± oblong; leaves lax-arching, blades fan-shaped. > 8
7 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions ± long-triangular or reniform; leaves arching to stiffly erect, blades fan-shaped to funnel-shaped. > 9
8 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions of blades generally less than 3.2 times as long as broad, apices with rounded, crenulate or crenate-denticulate lobes, lobes separated by shallow sinuses 0.1–2(–3.7) mm, segment stalks ca. 0.6–0.9 mm. Adiantum pedatum
8 Segments at middle of penultimate divisions usually more than 3.2 times as long as broad, apices with sharply denticulate, angular lobes, lobes separated by deep sinuses 0.6–4 mm, segment stalks to 0.6 mm. Adiantum aleuticum
9 Central ultimate segments on stalks less than 0.9 mm; false indusia mostly less than 3.5 mm. Adiantum aleuticum
9 Central ultimate segments on stalks generally greater than 0.9 mm; false indusia mostly exceeding 3.5 mm. Adiantum viridimontanum
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