Antrophyum Explained

Antrophyum is a genus of ferns in the family Pteridaceae.[1] They are commonly known as lineleaf ferns.

Description

Like most other vittarioid ferns, members of the genus have simple, straplike leaves. Most species lack a costa (midrib), although a few have a partial one, and the leaves are generally more than 1cm (00inches) wide. The leaves have netlike venation, with three or more rows of areolae ("gaps" in the net of veins) on either side of the midline. Linear sori are borne along the veins throughout the underside of the leaf. Paraphyses (miniature hairs) are present on the sori (separating the genus from Polytaenium); the cells at the tips of the paraphyses may be spherical or slender, and spores are trilete. (By comparison, Scoliosorus and Antrophyopsis always have spherical cells at the tips of their paraphyses, and monolete spores.)[2]

Taxonomy

The genus was first described by Georg Friedrich Kaulfuss in 1824. He included in it several species placed in Hemionitis by Carl Ludwig Willdenow, distinguishing them on the basis of their reticulate, indusiate sori sunken into the leaf tissue. The name means "growing from a cavity",[3] a reference to the growth of the sori from a groove in the leaf. In 1875, John Smith designated Antrophyum plantagineum as the lectotype for the genus.[4] Species include:[5] [6]

Other species include:

The subgenus Antrophyopsis, containing the species A. bivittatum C. Chr., A. boryanum Willd., and A. mannianum Hook. (later treated in Scoliosorus), was elevated to a genus in 2016.

Distribution

Most species occur in tropical Asia and the Pacific, but A. immersum and A. malgassicum are known from Africa and the Indian Ocean.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/genus.pl?17529 Antrophyum
  2. Schuettpelz . Eric . Chen . Cheng-Wei . Kessler . Michael . Pinson . Jerald B. . Johnson . Gabriel . Davila . Alex . Cochran . Alyssa T. . Huiet . Layne . Pryer . Kathleen M. . A revised generic classification of vittarioid ferns (Pteridaceae) based on molecular, micromorphological, and geographic data . Taxon . 65 . 4 . 708–722 . August 2016 . 10.12705/654.2 .
  3. Book: Kaulfuss, Georg Friedrich . Georg Friedrich Kaulfuss

    . Enumeratio Filicum . Georg Friedrich Kaulfuss . Caroli Cnobloch . Leipzig . 1824 . 69, 197 .

  4. Book: Smith, John . John Smith (botanist)

    . Historia Filicum . John Smith (botanist) . Macmillan & Co. . London . 1875 . 154, 410 .

  5. Web site: Family Vittariaceae, genus Antrophyum; world species list.. 2008-10-17. Hassler, Michael and Brian Swale. Checklist of World Ferns. https://web.archive.org/web/20081017051310/http://homepages.caverock.net.nz/~bj/fern/antrophyum.htm. 2008-10-17. dead.
  6. Web site: Antrophyum . 2008-10-17. Australian Plant Name Index (APNI), IBIS database. Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, Australian Government, Canberra.
  7. Nitta . Joel H. . Schuettpelz . Eric . Ramírez-Barahona . Santiago . Iwasaki . Wataru . et al. . 2022 . An Open and Continuously Updated Fern Tree of Life . Frontiers in Plant Science . 13 . 909768. 10.3389/fpls.2022.909768 . 36092417. 9449725. free.
  8. Web site: et al. . 2023 . Tree viewer: interactive visualization of FTOL . FTOL v1.5.0 [GenBank release 256] . 17 August 2023.