Nephrolepis |
Nephrolepis cordifolia |
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Boston fern, swordfern |
Boston fern, narrow swordfern, sword fern, tuber ladder fern, tuber sword fern, tuberous sword fern |
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Habit | Plants terrestrial, epiphytic, or on rock. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Stem(s) | ascending to erect, bearing wiry stolons and sometimes underground tubers. |
scales spreading, concolored. |
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Leaves | monomorphic, evergreen. |
2.5–10.7 × 0.3–0.7 dm. |
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Petiole | ca. 1/10–1/2 length of blade, base not swollen; vascular bundles more than 3, arranged in an arc, ± round in cross section. |
0.3–2 dm, moderately to densely scaly; scales spreading, pale brown throughout. |
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Blade | narrowly elliptic to linear-lanceolate, 1-pinnate (to 4–5-pinnate in various cultivated forms), very gradually reduced distally to minute pinnatifid apex, often seemingly indeterminate with apex never expanded, herbaceous to papery. |
lacking scales, glabrous (rarely with a few branched hairs abaxially). |
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Pinnae | articulate to rachis, sometimes deciduous, segment (pinna) margins entire, crenulate, or biserrate; proximal pinnae (usually several pairs) slightly to greatly reduced, sessile, equilateral or inequilateral with basiscopic base excised and often an acroscopic basal auricle; costae adaxially grooved, grooves not continuous from rachis to costae; indument of linear-lanceolate scales and sometimes multicellular hairs on abaxial and sometimes adaxial surfaces. |
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Veins | free, forked. |
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Indusia | reniform to lunate or deltate-rounded, attached along broad sinus, 1.1–1.7 mm wide. |
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Sori | ± round; indusia round-reniform and with deep sinus to semicircular with broad sinus or lunate without sinus and seemingly laterally attached, persistent. |
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Spores | brownish, tuberculate to rugose. |
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Tubers | present or absent. |
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Rachis | 2.2–9 dm, points of pinna attachment 5–12 mm apart; scales moderately spaced to dense, pale to dark brown, point of attachment distinctly darker. |
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Central | pinnae oblong to lanceolate-oblong, straight to slightly falcate, 0.9–5 × 0.4–0.9 cm, base auriculate-cordate, acroscopically overlapping rachis, acroscopic lobe deltate, margins entire to serrulate to smoothly crenate, apex acute to bluntly rounded; costae adaxially glabrous. |
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x | = 41. |
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2n | = 82. |
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Nephrolepis |
Nephrolepis cordifolia |
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Habitat | Terrestrial or epiphytic in wet, shady places, limestone ledges, cliffs, rock, roadsides, and often old homesites or waste places, widely escaped from cultivation and only questionably native to any particular region | |||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0 m (0 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
Widespread in tropical areas |
FL; HI; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Africa; se Asia
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Discussion | Nephrolepis often has veins ending in hydathodes and whitish lime-dots adaxially. Cultivars of Nephrolepis occasionally are found in the wild, where they persist for some time. Numerous forms of N. exaltata cv. `Bostoniensis' and its derivatives are widely cultivated, and the following are known from Florida: N. exaltata cv. `Bostoniensis', N. exaltata cv. `Elegantissima' complex, N. exaltata cv. `Florida Ruffles', N. exaltata cv. `M. P. Mills'. Nephrolepis falcata forma furcans (T. Moore in Nicholson) Proctor resembles N. biserrata in size, pinna shape, and sori, but it differs characteristically in having forking pinnae and rachises. It is widely cultivated and persists when escaped; it is not known to spread from spores. It is known in the literature under the following names: Aspidium biserratum Swartz var. furcans (T. Moore in Nicholson) Farwell, Nephrolepis biserrata (Swartz) Schott var. furcans (T. Moore in Nicholson) Hortus ex Bailey, and Nephrolepis davallioides var. furcans T. Moore in Nicholson. Nephrolepis hirsutula (G. Forster) C. Presl cv. `Superba' has irregularly pinnatisect, elliptic pinnae and a dense covering of reddish orange scales over most of the leaf surfaces. The report of Nephrolepis pectinata (Willdenow) Schott for Florida by E. T. Wherry (1964) was based on a misdetermination (T. Darling Jr. 1982). Species 25–30 (4 in the flora). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 2. | FNA vol. 2. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Polypodium cordifolium, Aspidium cordifolium | |||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Schott: Gen. Fil. plate 3. (1834) | (Linnaeus) C. Presl: Tent. Pterid. 79. (1836) | ||||||||||||||||||||
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