Blechnaceae |
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Plants perennial, mostly terrestrial, occasionally on rock or epiphytic. Stems creeping to suberect or ascending, sometimes climbing [rarely arborescent], slender to stout, dictyostelic, scaly. Leaves monomorphic or dimorphic, large and coarse, generally greater than 30 cm, often exceeding 1 m. Petiole not articulate, generally more than 2 vascular bundles arranged in arc, generally scaly at least at base. Blade often anthocyanic (reddish) when young, pinnatifid [rarely simple] to pinnate-pinnatifid or 2-pinnate [rarely decompound], glabrous or occasionally bearing scales or capitate glands. Rachis frequently grooved adaxially. Veins of sterile leaves generally free, rarely anastomosing, veins of fertile leaves united to form sorus-bearing secondary vein parallel to costa or costule (vascular commisure), sometimes anastomosing further. Sori elongate along secondary vein; indusia present [rarely absent], opening along costal side of fertile vein, frequently hidden by dehisced sporangia; sporangial stalk of 3 rows of cells. Spores monolete, reniform; perine present, variously ornamented. Gametophytes green, cordate, sometimes bearing capitate hairs, antheridia and archegonia borne on lower surface. Circumscription of genera is controversial, especially as to placement of those species now included in Blechnum . Characteristics holding the family together include the anastomoses of veins along the axes of the blade to form a series of areoles or a single continuous vein along which the sorus is borne, elongate sori with indusia opening toward midvein, bilateral spores, and chromosome base numbers of generally x = 28--36. Relationships of the family with both dryopteroid and athyrioid ferns have been suggested. Stenochlaena tenuifolia (Desvaux) T. Moore, native to the Old World, was reported as escaped from cultivation in the 1930s in southern Florida; it has not been collected there recently. It is distinguished by having climbing stems and by having contracted, 2-pinnate fertile leaves with sporangia covering the abaxial surface.
PLANT: Perennial herbs with branched or unbranched rhizomes, these scaly, the scales not clathrate. ROOTS: adventitious, usually branched. AERIAL STEMS: absent. LEAVES: narrowly or widely spaced along the rhizome, ours monomorphic (dimorphic elsewhere), the vernation circinate. BLADES: variously pinnately compound, herbaceous to somewhat papery or leathery in texture, usually sparsely scaly and with minute glandular trichomes when young, glabrous or nearly so at maturity, the developing leaves often reddish- or purplish-tinged. VENATION: with a single series of elongate areoles parallel to the costa, otherwise usually free, the veinlets irregularly and/or dichotomously branched. SORI: on the abaxial leaf surface, surficial or more commonly from shallow pits in the blade surface, ours discrete (confluent elsewhere), restricted to the costal areoles, narrowly oblong to linear in outline. INDUSIA: narrowly oblong, attached under the sorus but appearing lateral, opening along the side opposite the costa. PARAPHYSES: absent. SPORANGIA: with a stalk usually 3 cells wide, the capsule with a vertical ring-like annulus, glabrous. SPORES usually 64 per sporangium, monomorphic, monolete, bean-shaped, usually brown. GAMETOPHYTES: surficial, cordate, green, sometimes glandular, potentially bisexual. NOTES: Ca. 10 genera and 250 spp., nearly worldwide. REFERENCES: Yatskievych, G. and M.D. Windham. 2008. Vascular Plants of Arizona: Blechnaceae. CANOTIA 4 (2): 35–37. |
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