Woodsia |
Woodsia phillipsii |
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cliff-fern, woodsia |
Phillips' cliff fern |
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Habit | Plants usually on rock. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | compact to creeping; ascending or erect (rarely horizontal), stolons absent. |
compact to short-creeping, erect to horizontal, with few to many persistent petiole bases of unequal lengths; scales mostly uniformly brown but at least some bicolored with dark central stripe and pale brown margins, narrowly lanceolate. |
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Leaves | monomorphic, dying back over winter or sometimes persistent into the next season. |
5–35 × 1.5–6 cm. |
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Petiole | 1/5–3/4 length of blade, base not conspicuously swollen; vascular bundles 2, arranged laterally, ± round or oblong in cross section. |
light brown or straw-colored when mature, occasionally darker at very base, not articulate above base, relatively brittle and easily shattered. |
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Blade | linear to lanceolate or ovate, 1–2-pinnate-pinnatifid, gradually reduced distally to pinnatifid apex, herbaceous. |
lanceolate, usually 2-pinnate proximally, sparsely to moderately glandular, never viscid; glandular hairs with thin stalks and slightly expanded tips; rachis with scattered glandular hairs and hairlike scales. |
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Pinnae | not articulate to rachis, segment margins entire to dentate, not spiny; proximal pinnae somewhat reduced, sessile, bases usually ± equilateral; costae often shallowly grooved adaxially, grooves ± continuous from rachis to costae; indument of glandular (occasionally nonglandular) hairs on both surfaces, rarely absent. |
elongate-deltate to elliptic, longer than wide, often attenuate to a narrowly acute apex; largest pinnae with 7–18 pairs of widely spaced pinnules; abaxial and adaxial surfaces somewhat glandular, lacking nonglandular hairs or scales. |
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Indusia | of narrow, filamentous segments, these uniseriate for most of length, composed of ± isodiametric cells, often greatly surpassing mature sporangia. |
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Sori | in 1 row between midrib and margin on ultimate segments, round; indusia basal, dissected into several to numerous filamentous or scalelike segments encircling sorus, persistent but often obscure in mature sori. |
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Spores | brownish, cristate, rarely rugose. |
averaging 37–44 µm. 2n = 76. |
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Pinnules | dentate, often shallowly lobed; margins often lustrous adaxially, somewhat thickened, with occasional glands, appearing ciliate due to presence of multicellular translucent projections on teeth that are often prolonged to form twisted filaments. |
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Vein(s) | free, simple or forked. |
tips usually enlarged to form whitish hydathodes visible adaxially. |
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x | = 38, 39, 41. |
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Woodsia |
Woodsia phillipsii |
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Phenology | Sporulating summer–fall. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Cliffs and rocky slopes, usually on granitic or volcanic substrates | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 1600–3200 m (5200–10500 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
Mostly north temperate regions and higher elevations in the tropics |
AZ; NM; TX; n Mexico
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Discussion | Woodsia is a well-marked genus; its morphology and chromosome base number (x = 41) provide evidence of relationships to the dryopteroid ferns. Most authors consider Cystopteris to be its closest ally, and the two genera are often confused in herbarium collections. The resemblance is superficial in many ways, however, and Woodsia is easily distinguished from Cystopteris by its persistent petiole bases, multilobed indusia, and obscure veins that end in hydathodes before reaching the leaf margin. The North American species of Woodsia fall into two natural groups that might be recognized as subgenera. Woodsia ilvensis, W. glabella, and W. alpina have articulate petioles, indusial segments that are uniseriate throughout and composed of cells that are much longer than wide, entire or crenate pinnules, strictly concolored stem scales, and chromosome base numbers of 39–41. They are circumboreal in distribution and show clear affinities to species found only in Eurasia. The remainder of the North American taxa have petioles that are not articulate, indusial segments that are multiseriate at the base and composed of cells that are isodiametric or slightly longer than wide, dentate pinnules, often bicolored stem scales, and a chromosome base number of 38. All of these species are endemic to the New World and probably represent a distinct lineage within the genus. Hybridization is common within these natural groups, but intergroup hybrids are relatively rare. Species ca. 30 (10 in the flora). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Woodsia phillipsii traditionally has been identified as W. mexicana. It differs from typical W. mexicana, however, in having completely filamentous indusial segments, multicellular (often filamentous) translucent projections on the pinnule margins, a greater number of pinnules per pinna, and a diploid chromosome number. Woodsia phillipsii is the only diploid species currently recognized in the W. mexicana complex, and it was probably involved in the hybrid origins of both W. mexicana and W. neomexicana. Some individuals of the latter species are difficult to distinguish from W. phillipsii (see comments under W. neomexicana), and the two taxa occasionally hybridize to produce sterile triploids of intermediate morphology. Woodsia phillipsii is also known to hybridize with W. plummerae (see comments under that species) and W. cochisensis. (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. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Name authority | R. Brown: Prodr. 158. (1810) | Windham: Contr. Univ. Michigan Herb. 19: 50. (1993) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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