The Fern Lover's Companion - A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada by George Henry Tilton
page 45 of 136 (33%)
page 45 of 136 (33%)
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section there are two species. (Named for Thomas J. Woodward, an English
botanist.) [Illustration: Powdery Cloak Fern. _Notholaena dealbata_ (Kansas) (G.E. Davenport)] [Illustration: The Common Chain Fern. _Woodwardia virginica_] (1) THE COMMON CHAIN FERN. _Woodwardia virgínica_ Sterile and fertile fronds similar in outline, two to four feet high, once pinnate, the pinnæ deeply incised with oblong segments. Fruit-dots oblong in chain-like rows along the midrib both of the pinnæ and the lobes, confluent when ripe. Veins forming narrow rows of net-like spaces (areoles) beneath the fruit-dots, thence free to the margin. The spores ripen in July. The sterile fronds resemble those of the cinnamon fern, but the latter grow in crowns, with a single frond in the center, while the fronds of the chain fern rise singly from the creeping rootstock, which sends them up at intervals all summer. The sori are borne on the backs of fertile fronds. There are usually more sterile than fertile blades, especially in dense shade. We have waded repeatedly through a miry swamp in Melrose, Mass., where the wild calla flourishes along with the blueberry and other swamp bushes, and have found the chain fern in several shaded spots, but every frond was sterile. It is said that when exposed to the sun it always faces the south. Swamps, Maine to Florida, especially along the Atlantic Coast, and often in company with the narrow-leaved species. |
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