Nephrolepis exaltata (L.) Schott
-
Authority
Proctor, George R. 1989. Ferns of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 53: 1-389.
-
Family
Nephrolepidaceae
-
Scientific Name
-
Description
Species Description - Plants terrestrial or occasionally epiphytic. Rhizome short, suberect, concealed by the stout stipe bases, the apex clothed with a dense tuft of narrowly lance-attenuate, glabrous, light orange-brown scales up to 8 mm long and ca. 0.8 mm broad above the base, terminating in a long hairlike apex. Fronds closely clustered, suberect or spreading, up to 2.5 m long (but usually much less), the stipes much shorter than the blades (mostly 6-20 cm long), deciduously fibrillosescaly, the scales spreading, linear-filiform, concolorous, pale orange-brown, basally attached. Blades linear, mostly 50-100(-200) cm long, 6-14 cm broad near the middle, slightly narrowed toward the base, the apex apparently of indeterminate growth; rhachis light brown, deciduously fibrillose-scaly like the stipe, the scales glabrous; pinnae numerous, close, narrowly oblong or narrowly deltate-oblong and subfalcate, 3-7 cm long, 0.8-1.3 cm broad at the middle, acutish to subacuminate at apex, subcordate and obtusely auriculate at base, the auricle (on acroscopic side) often overlapping the rhachis, the margins bluntly serrulate to lightly crenate; tissue deciduously fibrillose or else apparently glabrate; veins 1 - or 2-forked. Sori supramedial, rather close; indusium variable, orbicular-cordate to subreniform, the sinus usually open and U-shaped.
-
Discussion
Basionym. Polypodium exaltatum Linnaeus, Syst. nated. 10, 2: 1326. 1759.
Type. Sloane, Nat. Hist. Jamaica 1: t. 31, which represents a plant collected in Jamaica by "Sir Arthur Rawdon's Gardener" {James Harlow).
Syn. Aspidium exaltatum (Linnaeus) Swartz, J. Bot. (Schrader) 1800(2): 32. 1802.
Nephrodium exaltatum (Linnaeus) R. Brown, Prodr. 148. 1810.
-
Distribution
General Distribution. Often stated to be pantropical, but many specimens in herbaria with this name have been misidentified, or else originated from cultivated or escaped plants. Its likely true natural distribution includes Florida, the Bahamas, Greater Antilles, and Mexico.
United States of America North America| Bahamas South America| Mexico North America|