Internal links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Aspleniineae > Aspleniaceae > Thelypteridaceae > Christella dentata
External links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Aspleniineae > Aspleniaceae > Thelypteridaceae > Christella dentata
Wikipedia links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Aspleniineae > Aspleniaceae > Thelypteridaceae > Christella dentata
Other links:
Species:
Common name: Binung
There are many local common names
In NSW it is known as binung
Conservation status: unkown
Etymology:
Spores:
Sori are circular in shape, with a hairy closed covering
Leaves:
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Stem & branches:
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Roots:
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Habit:
A small fern
Habitat:
On the margins of rainforest, by streams or in more open forests with adequate moisture
Distribution:
Widespread distribution in Australia and islands in the south Pacific Ocean
Grows north from the southern Illawarra region
Species:
World: S, G
Australia: S, G
Additional notes:
Naturalised
It was the first species of fern to become naturalised on the Hawaiian Islands, recorded initially in Oahu in 1887 and now found on all major islands there
There it interbreeds with the local species C. cyatheoides, with the resultant hybrid offspring sterile
Uses
Christella dentata is an edible fern, and also a folk remedy for skin diseases
Pharmacological study found that water extract of the fern was as toxic as anticancer drug 5-fluorouracil against human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line
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