Gleicheniaceae

C. Presl
Common names: Forking Fern Family
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2. Treatment on page 110.

Plants coarse, terrestrial. Stems long-creeping, forked, stele protostelic (a solid rod of vascular tissue with phloem surrounding xylem), covered with scales or hairs. Leaves monomorphic, large, scrambling or trailing, 1–many times forked. Petiole not articulate to stem, with pair of opposite pinnae and arrested bud at apex, or rachis continuing and producing 2 or more pairs of opposite pinnae. Pinnae 1–several times forked, with arrested bud at each fork; indument of simple, branched, or stellate hairs [scales]. Veins free, 1–4-forked. Sori round, indusia absent. Sporangia 2–many on slightly elevated receptacle, sessile to subsessile; annulus complete, transverse, medial, longitudinally dehiscent; spores 120–800 per sporangium. Spores all alike, whitish to yellowish, bilateral to globose, monolete or trilete, generally smooth without elaborately ornamented surface. Gametophyte borne aboveground, green, obcordate to elongate.

Distribution

Nearly worldwide in tropical to subtropical regions

Discussion

Genera 4, species ca. 140 (1 genus, 1 species in the flora).

Lower Taxa

... more about "Gleicheniaceae"
Clifton E. Nauman +
C. Presl +
Forking Fern Family +
Nearly worldwide in tropical to subtropical regions +
obcordate;elongate +
branched +  and simple +
monomorphic +
1 (?) +  and Many (?) +
not articulate +
holttum1957a +, maxon1909a +  and underwood1907a +
sessile;subsessile +
trilete +  and monolete +
whitish;yellowish +
globose +
ornamented +
Gleicheniaceae +
1-4-forked +