The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

cystoptère des montagnes, mountain bladder fern, mountain brittle fern

cystoptère ténue, Mackay's brittle fern, Mackay's fragile fern, upland brittle bladderfern

Stems

long-creeping, cordlike, internodes 1–2(–4) cm, old petiole bases few, hairs absent;

scales usually tan to light brown, ovate-lanceolate, radial walls tan to brown, thin, luminae tan.

creeping, not cordlike, internodes short, beset with old petiole bases, hairs absent;

scales tan to light brown, lanceolate, radial walls thin, luminae tan.

Leaves

monomorphic, at stem apex but not tightly clustered, to 45 cm, sori production about equal on all leaves (fairly independent of season).

monomorphic, clustered at stem apex, to 40 cm, nearly all bearing sori.

Petiole

dark brown to black at base, gradually becoming green or straw-colored distally, (1–)2–3 times length of blades, sparsely scaly throughout.

dark at base, mostly green to straw-colored distally, shorter than or nearly equaling blade, base sparsely scaly.

Blade

elongate-pentagonal, 3(–4)-pinnate-pinnatifid;

rachis and costae lacking gland-tipped hairs or bulblets;

axils of pinnae with occasional multicellular gland-tipped hairs.

lanceolate to narrowly elliptic, 1(–2)-pinnate-pinnatifid, widest at or just below middle, apex short-attenuate;

rachis and costae lacking gland-tipped hairs or bulblets;

axils of pinnae lacking multicellular, gland-tipped hairs.

Pinnae

ascending, typically at acute angle to rachis, only proximal pinnae occasionally curving toward blade apex, margins serrate;

proximal pinnae pinnate-pinnatifid, inequilateral, basal basiscopic pinnule stalked, enlarged, base truncate to obtuse;

distal pinnae deltate to ovate.

typically at acute angle to rachis, often curving toward blade apex, margins crenulate;

proximal pinnae pinnatifid to pinnate-pinnatifid, ± equilateral, basiscopic pinnules not enlarged;

basal basiscopic pinnules sessile, base cuneate to obtuse, distal pinnae ovate to narrowly elliptic.

Veins

directed into notches.

directed into teeth and notches.

Indusia

cup-shaped, apex truncate, hairs gland-tipped only along margin.

ovate to cup-shaped, without gland-tipped hairs.

Spores

spiny, usually 37–42 µm. 2n = 168.

spiny, usually 39–50 µm. 2n = 168.

Cystopteris montana

Cystopteris tenuis

Phenology Sporulating summer–fall. Sporulating summer–fall.
Habitat Terrestrial in wet woods or along water courses Mostly on shaded rock and cliff faces but also occasionally on forest floors
Elevation rare; 0–3500 m (rare; 0–11500 ft) 0–2800 m (0–9200 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AK; CO; MT; AB; BC; NB; NF; NS; NT; ON; QC; SK; YT; Greenland; Eurasia
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AR; AZ; CT; DE; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; MA; MD; ME; MI; MN; MO; NC; NE; NH; NJ; NV; NY; OH; OK; PA; RI; TN; UT; VA; VT; WI; WV; NB; NS; ON; QC
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Cystopteris montana, the most distinctive of the Cystopteris in the flora, probably is allied to Asian species. Although this boreal species is restricted primarily to high latitudes, it occurs disjunctly at high elevations in Colorado, where its habitats are being threatened by development. Cystopteris montana does not hybridize with any other Cystopteris in the flora, but it has been implicated in the origin of the European allopolyploid C. alpina (Roth) Desvaux.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Long recognized as Cystopteris fragilis var. mackayi, C. tenuis was returned to species status by R. C. Moran (1983b). It is probably an allotetraploid originating from C. protrusa and an extinct diploid related to C. fragilis (C. H. Haufler 1985; C. H. Haufler and M. D. Windham 1991).

Cystopteris tenuis is common in eastern North America and less frequent at the northern and western perimeter of its range. In the center of its distribution (Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania), the narrow, elliptic pinnae angled toward the blade apex and the rounded teeth make C. tenuis relatively distinct from C. fragilis and C. protrusa (although the early season, sterile leaves of C. protrusa often resemble those of C. tenuis). In the west and especially in the northeast, C. tenuis and C. fragilis are difficult to distinguish. For the most part, C. fragilis is confined to higher latitudes and elevations than C. tenuis, but the two species can be sympatric and occasionally form sterile tetraploid hybrids. Cystopteris protrusa and C. tenuis are infrequently sympatric, but where they are, sterile triploid hybrids can occur. Hybrids between C. tenuis and C. tennesseensis are recognized as C. × wagneri (R. C. Moran 1983). Hybridization between C. tenuis and C. bulbifera has also been reported (R. C. Moran 1982b). This hybrid, C. × illinoensis R. C. Moran, is known only from the type and needs to be studied further.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 2. FNA vol. 2.
Parent taxa Dryopteridaceae > Cystopteris Dryopteridaceae > Cystopteris
Sibling taxa
C. bulbifera, C. fragilis, C. laurentiana, C. protrusa, C. reevesiana, C. tennesseensis, C. tenuis, C. utahensis
C. bulbifera, C. fragilis, C. laurentiana, C. montana, C. protrusa, C. reevesiana, C. tennesseensis, C. utahensis
Synonyms Polypodium montanum Nephrodium tenue, C. fragilis var. mackayi
Name authority (Lamarck) Bernhardi ex Desvaux: Mém. Soc. Linn. Paris 6(2,3): 264.1827 (Michaux) Desvaux
Web links