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The Fern Lover's Companion - A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada by George Henry Tilton
page 17 of 136 (12%)

[Illustration: Fig. 4]

In many ferns the sporangia are surrounded in whole or in part by a
vertical, elastic ring (annulus) reminding one of a small, brown worm
closely coiled (Fig. 4). As the spores mature, the ring contracts and
bursts with considerable force, scattering the spores. The spores of the
different genera mature at different times from May to September. A good
time to collect ferns is just before the fruiting season. (For times of
fruiting see individual descriptions or chronological chart on page 220.)


HELPFUL HINTS

The following hints may be helpful to the young collector:

1. A good lens with needles for dissecting is very helpful in examining the
sori, veins, glands, etc., as an accurate knowledge of any one of these
items may aid in identifying a given specimen. Bausch and Lomb make a
convenient two-bladed pocket glass for about two dollars.[1]

[Footnote 1: In the linen tester here figured (cost $1.50) the lens is
mounted in a brass frame which holds it in position, enabling the dissector
to use both hands. A tripod lens will also be found cheap and serviceable.]

[Illustration]

2. Do not exterminate or weaken a fern colony by taking more plants than it
can spare. In small colonies of rare ferns take a few and leave the rest to
grow. It is decidedly ill-bred to rob a locality of its precious plants.
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