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Cyclosorus lakhimpurensis (Rosenst.) Copel.FamilyThelypteridaceae NomenclatureCyclosorus lakhimpurensis (Rosenst.) Copel., Gen. Fil. 142. 1947; B.K.Nayar & S.Kaur, Companion Beddome's Handb. Ferns Brit. India 66, 95. 1974. – Dryopteris lakhimpurensis Rosenst., Med. Rijksherb. 31: 7. 1917. – Thelypteris lakhimpurensis (Rosenst.) K.Iwats., Mem. Coll. Sci. Univ. Kyoto B. 31: 194. 1965; Tagawa & K.Iwats., Fl. Thailand 3: 412. 1988. – Pronephrium lakhimpurense (Rosenst.) Holttum, Blumea 20: 110. 1972; Boonkerd & Pollawatn, Pterid. Thailand: 226. 2000. Dryopteris rubra Ching, Bull. Fan Mem. Inst. Biol. 2: 198, t. 12. 1931. – Abacopteris rubra (Ching) Ching, Bull. Fan Mem. Inst. Biol. 8: 245. 1938; Holttum, Dansk Bot. Ark. 20: 23. 1961. – Cyclosorus rubra (Ching) Tardieu ex Tardieu & C.Chr., Notul. Syst. 7: 76. 1938; Tardieu & C.Chr., Fl. Indo-Chine 7(2): 390. 1941. – Thelypteris rubra (Ching) K.Iwats., J. Jap. Bot. 38: 315. 1963; Tagawa & K.Iwats., SouthE. Asian Stud. 3(3): 81. 1965; Tagawa & K.Iwats., SouthE. Asian Stud. 5: 70. 1967. Cyclosorus moulmeinensis auct. non (Bedd.) Copel.: Holttum, Dansk Bot. Ark. 23: 233. 1965. DescriptionRhizome creeping, 6–8 mm diam., blackish; scales oblong-ovate with tails, up to 5 by 1.3 mm, brown, hairy. Stipes 43–111 cm long, stramineous with dark scaly base. Laminae oblong, 40–105 by 25–50 cm; lateral pinnae (4–)6–9 pairs, subsessile, ascending, narrowly oblong, cuspidate at apex, rounded to broadly cuneate at base, subentire or irregularly undulate, 16–30 by 3.8–5.5 cm, aerophores present at rachis/costa junction, most conspicuous in crozier, basal pinnae reduced or not; thin, papyraceous to herbaceous, green to dark green, tinted red in dried specimens, glabrous to densely minutely pubescent beneath; venation meniscioid, or excurrent veins interrupted. Sori in two rows usually close to excurrent veinlets, round to oblong, often confluent at maturity, exindusiate; sporangia not setose , sometimes glands on sporangial body. Distribution in ThailandNORTHERN: Mae Hong Son, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Tak, Phitsanulok; NORTH-EASTERN: Loei; SOUTH-WESTERN: Kanchanaburi, Phetchaburi. Wider DistributionHimalaya to SW China and N Vietnam. EcologyOn humus-rich slopes usually near streams in forests at medium altitudes. Proposed IUCN Conservation AssessmentLeast Concern (LC). This species is widespread and not under any known threat. Voucher specimens - ThailandMiddleton et al. 5123, Loei, Phu Suan Sai National Park (E). Habit Habit Rhizome Crozier with prominent pale green aerophores Crozier Venation Aerophore at junction of rachis and pinna Lower surface of pinna Sori |
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