oak-fern
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Plants terrestrial. |
long-creeping, stolons absent. |
monomorphic, dying back in winter. |
ca. 1.5–3 times length of blade, base not swollen; vascular bundles 2, lateral, ± oblong in cross section. |
broadly deltate, ternate, or ovate, 2–3-pinnate-pinnatifid, reduced distally to pinnatifid apex, herbaceous. |
weakly articulate to rachis but persistent, segment margins entire to crenate; proximal pinnae longest, petiolulate, usually ± inequilateral with pinnules on basiscopic side longer than those on acroscopic side; costae adaxially grooved, grooves not continuous from rachis to costae; indument lacking or of minute (0.1 mm) glands abaxially and sometimes along costae adaxially. |
free, simple or forked. |
in 1 row between midrib and margin, ± round; indusia absent. |
brownish, rugose. |
= 40. |
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North America; North temperate regions; Eurasia |
Species 8 (5 in the flora). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
1. Adaxial blade surface glabrous or moderately glandular, abaxial blade surface and rachis moderately or densely glandular. | → 2 |
1. Adaxial and abaxial blade surfaces and rachis essentially glabrous. | → 3 |
2. Blades glabrous on adaxial surface; proximal pinnae and basiscopic pinnules of proximal pinnae curving toward apex of leaf and apex of pinna, respectively; pinnae of 2d pair almost always sessile with basal pinnules ± equal in length to adjacent pinnules. | jessoense subsp. parvulum |
2. Blades moderately glandular on adaxial surface; proximal pinnae and basiscopic pinnules of proximal pinnae ± perpendicular to rachis and costa, respectively; pinnae of 2d pair usually stalked, or if sessile with basal pinnules shorter than adjacent pinnules. | G. robertianum |
3. Pinnae of 2d pair and basal basiscopic pinnule of proximal pinnae stalked. | G. appalachianum |
3. Pinnae of 2d pair sessile or rarely stalked; proximal basiscopic pinnule of basal pinnae sessile. | → 4 |
4. Pinnae of 2d pair sessile with basal pinnules unequal in length (basiscopic markedly longer); ultimate segments of proximal pinnae slightly lobed to crenate, apex often crenulate, acute; blades 8-24 cm. | G. disjunctum |
4. Pinnae of 2d pair rarely stalked, if sessile with basal pinnules ± equal in length (basiscopic = acroscopic); ultimate segments of proximal pinnae crenate to entire, apex entire, rounded; blades 3-14 cm. | → 5 |
5. Sessile basal basiscopic pinnule of proximal pinnae with basal basiscopic pinnulet (division of pinnule) ± equal in length to adjacent pinnulet; pinnae of 2d pair usually sessile, with basal pinnules ± equal in length to adjacent basal pinnule; spores 34-39 µm. | G. dryopteris |
5. Sessile basal basiscopic pinnule of proximal pinnae with basal basiscopic pinnulet shorter than adjacent pinnulet; pinnae of 2d pair sessile, with basal pinnules shorter than adjacent pinnule, or 2d basal pinnae rarely stalked; spores 27-31 µm. | G. appalachianum |
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FNA vol. 2. Author: Kathleen M. Pryer. |
Dryopteridaceae |
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Newman: Phytologist 4: 371. (1851) |
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