The Fern Lover's Companion - A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada by George Henry Tilton
page 46 of 136 (33%)
page 46 of 136 (33%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
[Illustration: Net-Veined Chain Fern. _Woodwardia areolata_ (Stratford,
Conn.)] (2) NET-VEINED CHAIN FERN NARROW-LEAVED CHAIN FERN _Woodwardia areolàta. W. angustifòlia_ Root stocks creeping and chaffy. Sterile and fertile fronds unlike; sterile ones nine to twelve inches tall, deltoid-ovate. Broadest at the base, with lanceolate, serrulate divisions united by a broad wing. Veins areolate; fertile fronds taller, twelve to twenty inches high with narrowly linear divisions, the areoles and fruit-dots in a single row each side of the secondary midrib, the latter sunk in the tissues. This species is less common than the Virginia fern, but they often grow near each other. We have collected both in the Blue Hill reservation near Boston, and both have been found in Hingham, Medford, and Reading, and doubtless in other towns along the coast. Mrs. Parsons speaks of finding them in the flat, sandy country near Buzzard's Bay. The net-veined species has some resemblance to the sensitive fern, but in the latter the spore cases are shut up in small pods formed by the contracting and rolling up of the lobes, whereas the chain fern bears its sori on the under side of long, narrow pinnæ. Besides, the sterile fronds of the latter have serrulate segments. As in the sensitive fern there are many curious gradations between the fertile and sterile fronds, both in shape and fruitfulness. Waters calls them the "_obtusilobàta_ form." [Illustration: The Spleenworts 1. Narrow-leaved 2. Ebony 3. Rue 4. Scott's |
|