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Asplenium trichomanes

Asplenium trichomanes  

No occurrences found

Family: Aspleniaceae
dense spleenwort, more...
Asplenium trichomanes image
Max Licher
General: Short creeping stems, often branched from short rhizomes, with many fronds, in dense or radiating tufts. Leaves: Monomorphic, with reddish brown or blackish brown petiole, lustrous, 1-4 cm long; blade linear, once pinnate, 3-22 cm long by 0.5-1.5 cm wide, thin, glabrous to sparsely pubescent; base gradually tapers; rachis reddish brown; pinnae in 15-35 pairs, oblong to oval, often oblong and broadly wedge-shaped at base and somewhat expanded at upper margin, but not auriculate, entire, crenate to slightly incised; stipe firm, threadlike and shiny purplish-brown. Sporangia: Sori in 2-4 pairs per pinna, on both sides, spores 64 per sporangia. Ecology: Found on acidic substrates like sandstone, basalt and granite, often in the shade, in crevices and along cliffs from 6,000-9,000 ft (1829-2743 m). Notes: FNA indicates that our species is ssp. trichomanes. Ethnobotany: Taken for coughs, for liver complaints, and for irregular menstruation. Etymology: Asplenium is from Greek a, without and spleen, while trichomanes is the name of a fern as mentioned by Theophrastus and Dioscorides, for a fern resembling Adiantum. Sources: FNA 1993, Dittmer 1954, Yarborough and Powell 2002, Kearney and Peebles 1969
Asplenium trichomanes image
Patrick Alexander
Asplenium trichomanes image
Patrick Alexander
Asplenium trichomanes image
Patrick Alexander
Asplenium trichomanes image
Asplenium trichomanes image