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Goniophlebium persicifolium (Desv.) Bedd.Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in C:\Data\serverroots\htdocs\ThaiFerns\factsheets\functions.php on line 17 FamilyPolypodiaceae NomenclatureGoniophlebium persicifolium (Desv.) Bedd., Suppl. Ferns S. Ind.: 21. 1870; Copeland, Fern Fl. Philipp. 459. 1960; Rödl-Linder, Blumea 34: 383. 1990; Hovenkamp & Rödl-Linder, Fl. Males., Ser. II, Ferns and Fern Allies 3: 52. 1998; Boonkerd & Pollawatn, Pterid. Thailand: 271. 2000. – Polypodium persicifolium Desv., Berl. Mag. 5: 316. 1811; Tardieu & C.Chr., Fl. Indo-Chine 7(2): 537. 1941; Holttum, Rev. Fl. Malaya ed. 1, 2: 206. f: 107. 1955 [‘1954’]; Tagawa & K.Iwats., SouthE. Asian Stud. 5: 57. 1967; Tagawa & K.Iwats., Fl. Thailand 3: 574. 1989. – Type: Anonymous (P-Juss, fragment), Java. For further synonymy see Hovenkamp & Rödl-Linder, Fl. Males., Ser. II, Ferns and Fern Allies 3: 52. 1998. DescriptionRhizome long creeping, 4–5(–10) mm diam., dark brown, densely scaly; scales pseudopeltate, clathrate, ovate with tails, 1.8–5 mm long including tails, 0.8–2 mm broad at base, brown, entire to short-dentate. Stipes stramineous or brownish in upper parts, 20–35 cm long, minutely scaly or glabrescent. Laminae pinnate with distinct terminal pinnae, oblong to lanceolate, 35–60(–150) by 14–44 cm; lateral pinnae up to 20 pairs, ascending, more or less falcate, lower to middle ones larger, distinctly stalked, linear-lanceolate, cuneate at base, caudately acuminate at apex, 7–22 by 2–2.5 cm, serrate at margin, upper pinnae gradually becoming smaller upwards; terminal pinna up to 15 cm long; veins anastomosing to form 2–4 rows of areoles at each side of costa; herbaceous, green, glabrous or with minute 2-celled glandular hairs. Sori round to elliptic, terminal on simple included veinlets in costal areoles, in a single row at each side of costa, medial or costular, up to 2 mm diam., distinctly immersed . Distribution in ThailandSOUTH-EASTERN: Chanthaburi; PENINSULAR: Nakhon Si Thammarat, Trang, Yala. Wider DistributionHimalayas to the Pacific. EcologyOn mossy tree trunks in light shade or in dense evergreen forests, not so common at 400–1500 m alt. Proposed IUCN Conservation AssessmentLeast Concern (LC). This species is widespread and not under any known threat. NotesTagawa & Iwatsuki (1989) and Holttum (1955) both report that the rhizome in this species is glaucous but all of the Thai material we have seen has a brown rhizome . Voucher specimens - ThailandSuksathan 2459, Yala (QBG). Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in C:\Data\serverroots\htdocs\ThaiFerns\factsheets\functions.php on line 17 |
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