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Dennstaedtiaceae
Dennstaedtiaceae image
Tony Frates
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Raymond B. Cranfill in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Plants perennial, mostly terrestrial, rarely epiphytic, generally in mesic, forested habitats. Stems short- to long-creeping, solenostelic [protostelic], bearing hairs (or less often scales), often branching by means of buds on proximal part of petiole. Leaves monomorphic, circinate in bud. Petiole not articulate, with 1--many vascular bundles, hairy or glabrous [scaly]. Blade 1-pinnate to decompound (rarely simple), glabrous or hairy or with mixture of hairs and glands; rachis and costae grooved adaxially [not grooved in some genera]. Veins free or sometimes joined at margin in fertile segments, pinnate or forking in ultimate segments. Sori near or at blade margin on vein tips or submarginal commissural vein; true (inner) indusia present, free or fused with portion of blade margin to form cup or pouch, or obscured by revolute and usually modified portion of blade margin [indusia rarely absent]; sporangial stalk of 1--3 rows of cells. Spores not green, tetrahedral or bilateral, monolete or trilete. Gametophytes green, cordate, with archegonia and antheridia borne on lower surface. The family is variously circumscribed, in the strict sense including only eight genera, while in the broadest sense encompassing about half the recognized genera of higher ferns (R. E. Holttum 1947). Here it is delimited in the sense of J. T. Mickel (1973). Characteristics that define the family include submarginal or marginal sori with generally two indusia, an inner true indusium and an outer false indusium formed by the revolute, often modified segment margin (although either type may be reduced or absent in some genera); indument usually of hairs rather than scales; and long-creeping protostelic or solenostelic stems with stem buds on the bases of the petioles. Not all genera in the family share all the characteristics.

CANOTIA 4(2)
PLANT: Perennial herbs with usually branched rhizomes, these hairy in ours. ROOTS: adventitious, usually branched. AERIAL STEMS: absent. LEAVES: narrowly or widely spaced along the rhizome, monomorphic or nearly so, the vernation circinate. BLADES: variously pinnately compound, herbaceous to somewhat papery or leathery in texture, variously glabrous to hairy. VENATION: free or fused along the margins, the veinlets unbranched or udichotomosly few-branched. SORI: on the abaxial leaf surface, surficial, confluent, forming a line along the margins in ours. INDUSIA: usually present, sometimes poorly developed, the recurved pinna margins sometimes also acting as a pseudoindusium. PARAPHYSES: absent. SPORANGIA: with a stalk 1-3 cells wide, with a vertical ring-like annulus, glabrous. SPORES: usually 64 per sporangium, monomorphic, trilete in ours, tetrahedral-globose, usually brown. GAMETOPHYTES: surficial, cordate, green, sometimes glandular, potentially bisexual. NOTES: Ca. 20 genera and 400 spp., nearly worldwide. REFERENCES: Yatskievych, G. and M.D. Windham. 2008. Vascular Plants of Arizona: Dennstaedtiaceae. CANOTIA 4 (2): 38-40.
Species within checklist: Sonoran Desert Region
Dennstaedtia distenta
Image of Dennstaedtia distenta
Dennstaedtia rubiginosa
Image of Dennstaedtia rubiginosa
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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