Internal links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Polypodiaceae > Pyrrosia lanceolata
External links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Polypodiaceae > Pyrrosia lanceolata
Wikipedia links: Monilophytes > Polypodiales > Polypodiaceae > Pyrrosia lanceolata
Other links: https://bie.ala.org.au/species/https://id.biodiversity.org.au/node/apni/2916416
Species: P confluens, P lanceolata, P rupestris
Common name: Lanceleaf tongue fern
Conservation status: unkown
Etymology:
The Latin name of Pyrrosia comes from the Greek pyrrhos (red), which refers to its leaves that are red due to the sporangia
lanceolata: lanceolate, referring to the outline of the fronds, a rather meaningless epithet as it applies to practically all the species of the genus
Spores:
Rhizome slender, widely creeping, c. 1 mm in diameter; rhizome scales pale brown to grey, linear to lanceolate, ciliate, up to 4 × 0.8 mm. Fronds spaced apart, stipitate, coriaceous. Stipe up to 20 mm long, densely covered with soft hairs when young, glabrous later. Lamina 50-200 × 6-10 mm, simple, linear-lanceolate to linear-elliptic, apex pointed to rounded, base wedge-shaped to tapering, margins narrowly reflexed. Lower surface densely covered with soft, appressed, grey to brown stellate hairs with short arms, upper surface sparsely covered to more or less hairless. Sori numerous, oval, up to 1 mm long, confined to the upper half of the frond, emerging through the hairs.
Leaves:
x
Stem & branches:
x
Roots:
x
Habit:
x
Habitat:
x
Distribution:
Cameroon, central African Republic, congo, DRC, Gabon, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Principe, Réunion, Rodrigues Isl., Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe
Also Sri Lanka, India and Malaysia to south China and Polynesia
Additional notes:
Pyrrosia is a genus of about 100 fern species in the polypod family, Polypodiaceae
Like other species in Polypodiaceae, the species of Pyrrosia are generally epiphytic on trees or rocks, a few species are terrestrial