Microgramma tuberosa is a species of fern in the family Polypodiaceae. It is endemic to Ecuador. It is threatened by habitat loss.
The rhizome is 2to thick and shaped like a rope, branching occasionally. It bears small, firm scales appressed to the surface, densely covering it and occasionally overlapping. They are chestnut brown in color, with pale borders that are erose to denticulate. They vary considerably in form and shape, from almost round and 0.5sigfig=1NaNsigfig=1 long to ovate with a long-acuminate apex, 1.5sigfig=2NaNsigfig=2 (occasionally 2sigfig=2NaNsigfig=2) long, and generally persist on the rhizome when mature. Like other members of subgenus Solanopteris, the rhizome bears hollow tubers, formed from modified branches of the rhizome. These are borne directly on the rhizome, without a stalk, are roughly globular in shape, and are covered by the same scales as the rest of the rhizome.
The species was first described as Polypodium tuberosum by William Ralph Maxon in 1943. He based his description on two specimens collected near La Chonta, Ecuador by Joseph Nelson Rose et al. in 1918 and deposited at the United States National Herbarium. The name tuberosum presumably refers to the presence of tubers on the rhizome. In 1973, Werner Rauh transferred this species into the genus Solanopteris, erected by Edwin Copeland in 1951 for a similar species, which he distinguished from Microgramma on the basis of the domatia on the rhizome, irregularly netted venation, and the fleshy texture of its leaf blades. David B. Lellinger considered the characters cited by Copeland insufficient to recognize a separate genus, and preferred to recognize Solanopteris as a subgenus of Microgramma. He did not transfer this species to Microgramma until 1984, in preparation for publishing a catalog of fern type specimens at the National Herbarium.
There are relatively few collections of the species, and it may be identical with Microgramma bismarckii, a similar species native to Ecuador and Peru.
Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, where it grows as an epiphyte. It is known only from a few collections in Ecuador.