Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Specimen Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
    • Exsiccati Search
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Flora Projects
    • Arizona
    • New Mexico
    • Colorado Plateau
    • Plant Atlas of Arizona (PAPAZ)
    • Sonoran Desert
    • Teaching Checklists
  • Agency Floras
    • NPS - Intermountain
    • USFWS - Region 2
    • BLM Flora
    • Coronado NF
  • Dynamic Floras
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Additional Websites
    • New Mexico Flores
    • Plant Atlas Project of Arizona (PAPAZ)
    • Southwest Colorado Wildflowers
    • Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness
    • Consortium of Midwest Herbaria
    • Consortium of Southern Rocky Mountain Herbaria
    • Intermountain Region Herbaria Network (IRHN)
    • Mid-Atlantic Herbaria
    • North American Network of Small Herbaria (NANSH)
    • Northern Great Plains Herbaria
    • Red de Herbarios del Noroeste de México (northern Mexico)
    • SERNEC - Southeastern USA
    • Texas Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria (TORCH)
  • Resources
    • CCH2 User Guide
    • Video Tutorials
    • Contributing Specimens
Polypodiaceae
Polypodiaceae image
Max Licher  
  • FNA
  • VPAP
  • Web Links
Alan R. Smith in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Plants perennial, terrestrial, on rock, or often epiphytic, erect, arching, or occasionally pendent. Stems long- to short-creeping, branched or not, bearing scales and few to numerous roots, usually dictyostelic. Leaves monomorphic to dimorphic, circinate in bud. Petiole usually articulate at base [rarely nonarticulate, as in Loxogramme ], lacking scales or sometimes scaly, with usually 3 vascular bundles. Blade petiole, rachis, costae, and sometimes blade tissue usually bearing hairs (these often septate and with reddish crosswalls) and/or scales. Sori borne abaxially on veins, round to oblong, occasionally elongate, rarely marginal, rarely covering surface; paraphyses present or absent; sporangia with stalk of 2 or 3 rows of cells; indusia absent. Spores usually transparent or yellowish (rarely greenish), all 1 kind, bilateral, monolete [rarely trilete, as in some Loxogramme], surface most often smooth, tuberculate, verrucose, or granulate, occasionally spiny, 64 per sporangium (spores globose and 32 per sporangium in apogamous spp.). Gametophytes green, aboveground, cordate or elliptic, glabrous or sometimes glandular; archegonia and antheridia borne on lower surface, antheridia 3-celled.

Genera ca. 40, species perhaps 500 (7 genera, 25 species in the flora): worldwide, especially tropics and subtropics.

Phymatosorus scolopendria (Burman f.) Pichi-Sermolli, native to the Old World, is a rare escape in southern Florida. Genera in this family are variously circumscribed, and the New World species historically were placed in the single genus Polypodium . Many of the segregates recognized here are still placed in Polypodium in recent floristic accounts. Limits of genera in both Old World and New World are controversial and are currently under study by several workers.

(Key to genera of Polypodiaceae)

CANOTIA 5(1)
PLANT: Perennial herbs with branched or unbranched rhizomes, these scaly and often pruinose or glaucous, the scales sometimes clathrate (“resembling latticework”). ROOTS: adventitious, usually branched. AERIAL STEMS: absent. LEAVES: closely or widely spaced along the rhizome, often attached at a joint to a low peg like protrusion of the rhizome (phyllopodium), ours monomorphic, the vernation circinate. PETIOLES: with usually 3 small vascular bundles basally. BLADES: pinnatisect in ours, usually at least somewhat coriaceous, distally usually somewhat pinnatifid. VENATION: free or more commonly casually to regularly anastomosing, sometimes difficult to observe. SORI: on the abaxial leaf surface, surficial or from shallow pits in the blade surface, often restricted to the distal half of the blade, discrete in ours, in a single row on each side of the costa in ours, circular to oblongelliptic in outline. INDUSIA: absent. PARAPHYSES: sometimes present among the sporangia, peltate or clavate. SPORANGIA: with a stalk 2 or 3 cells wide, the capsule with a vertical ring-like annulus. SPORES: 64 per sporangium, monomorphic, monolete, bean-shaped, usually yellow. GAMETOPHYTES: surficial, cordate, green, usually glabrous, potentially bisexual. NOTES: Ca. 40 genera and 500 spp., nearly worldwide. The Polypodiaceae, which at one time were circumscribed to comprise most of the more advanced groups of ferns, are here treated in a more restricted sense. Generic classification within the family continues to undergo revision. The family is most diverse in the tropics, and is an important component of epiphytic vegetation in many forest types. REFERENCES: Yatskievych, G. and M.D. Windham. Vascular Plants of Arizona: Polypodiaceae. CANOTIA 5 (1): 34-38, 2009.
  • Encyclopedia of Life
  • W3Tropicos
  • USDA PLANTS Database
  • Flora of North America
  • International Plant Names Index
  • Google Search Engine
  • Google Images
  • BOLD Systems - Barcode of Life Data Systems
  • Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI)
  • NCBI - National Center for Biotechnology Information
Species within checklist: Rainbow Bridge National Monument || << 1 - 50 taxa >>
Acrosorus streptophyllus
Image of Acrosorus streptophyllus
Adenophorus abietinus
Image of Adenophorus abietinus
Adenophorus epigaeus
Image of Adenophorus epigaeus
Adenophorus haalilioanus
Image of Adenophorus haalilioanus
Adenophorus hymenophylloides
Image of Adenophorus hymenophylloides
Adenophorus montanus
Image of Adenophorus montanus
Adenophorus oahuensis
Image of Adenophorus oahuensis
Adenophorus periens
Image of Adenophorus periens
Adenophorus pinnatifidus
Image of Adenophorus pinnatifidus
Adenophorus sarmentosus
Image of Adenophorus sarmentosus
Adenophorus tamariscinus
Image of Adenophorus tamariscinus
Adenophorus tenellus
Image of Adenophorus tenellus
Adenophorus tripinnatifidus
Image of Adenophorus tripinnatifidus
Adenophorus x abbottiae
Images
not available
Adenophorus x carsonii
Images
not available
Aglaomorpha drynarioides
Image of Aglaomorpha drynarioides
Aglaomorpha fortunei
Image of Aglaomorpha fortunei
Aglaomorpha heraclea
Image of Aglaomorpha heraclea
Aglaomorpha latipinna
Image of Aglaomorpha latipinna
Aglaomorpha meyeniana
Image of Aglaomorpha meyeniana
Aglaomorpha mollis
Image of Aglaomorpha mollis
Aglaomorpha pilosa
Image of Aglaomorpha pilosa
Aglaomorpha propinqua
Image of Aglaomorpha propinqua
Aglaomorpha quercifolia
Image of Aglaomorpha quercifolia
Aglaomorpha rigidula
Image of Aglaomorpha rigidula
Aglaomorpha sparsisora
Image of Aglaomorpha sparsisora
Aglaomorpha speciosa
Image of Aglaomorpha speciosa
Aglaomorpha splendens
Image of Aglaomorpha splendens
Aglaomorpha volkensii
Image of Aglaomorpha volkensii
Aglaomorpha willdenowii
Images
not available
Alansmia cultrata
Image of Alansmia cultrata
Alansmia elastica
Image of Alansmia elastica
Alansmia heteromorpha
Image of Alansmia heteromorpha
Alansmia lanigera
Image of Alansmia lanigera
Alansmia laxa
Image of Alansmia laxa
Alansmia longa
Image of Alansmia longa
Alansmia senilis
Image of Alansmia senilis
Alansmia smithii
Image of Alansmia smithii
Alansmia stella
Images
not available
Alansmia turrialbae
Image of Alansmia turrialbae
Alansmia variabilis
Image of Alansmia variabilis
Amphoradenium hymenophylloides
Image of Amphoradenium hymenophylloides
Amphoradenium tamariscinum
Image of Amphoradenium tamariscinum
Anarthropteris dictyopteris
Images
not available
Anarthropteris lanceolata
Image of Anarthropteris lanceolata
Archigrammitis friderici-et-pauli
Image of Archigrammitis friderici-et-pauli
Arthromeris intermedia
Images
not available
Arthromeris lehmannii
Image of Arthromeris lehmannii
Arthromeris wallichiana
Image of Arthromeris wallichiana
Ascogrammitis alan-smithii
Image of Ascogrammitis alan-smithii
The National Science Foundation
Developments of SEINet, Symbiota, and associated specimen databases have been supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)