Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
    • Dynamic Species List
    • Exsiccati
    • Taxonomic Explorer
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Species Checklists
    • North America
  • Crowdsource
  • Contacts
    • Partners
  • Acknowledgements
Adiantum pedatum  
Family: Pteridaceae
Adiantum pedatum image
Liz Makings
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Cathy A. Paris in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Stems short-creeping; scales bronzy deep yellow, concolored, margins entire. Leaves lax-arching (rarely pendent), closely spaced, 40--75 cm. Petiole 1--2 mm diam., glabrous, occasionally glaucous. Blade fan-shaped, pseudopedate, 1-pinnate distally, 15--30 × 15--35 cm, glabrous; proximal pinnae 3--9-pinnate; rachis straight, glabrous, occasionally glaucous. Segment stalks 0.5--1.5(--1.7) mm, dark color entering into segment base. Ultimate segments oblong, ca. 3 times as long as broad; basiscopic margin straight; acroscopic margin lobed, lobes separated by narrow incisions 0--0.9(--1.1) mm wide; apex obtuse, divided into shallow, rounded lobes separated by shallow sinuses 0.1--2(--3.7) mm deep, margins of lobes crenulate or crenate-denticulate. Indusia transversely oblong, 1--3 mm, glabrous. Spores mostly 34--40 µm diam. 2 n = 58. Sporulating summer--fall. Rich, deciduous woodlands, often on humus-covered talus slopes and moist lime soils; 0--700 m; N.B., N.S., Ont., Que.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Miss., Mo., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va., Wis. Once considered a single species across its range in North America and eastern Asia, Adiantum pedatum is considered to be a complex of at least three vicariant species ( A . pedatum and A . aleuticum occur in North America) and a derivative allopolyploid species (C. A. Paris 1991). Adiantum pedatum in the strict sense is restricted to deciduous woodlands in eastern North America.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Rhizome short-creeping, 3-5 mm thick, its scales light brown, 3-6 נ1-2 mm; lvs few or solitary, with an erect, purple or purplish-black petiole 1-6 dm, the blade shorter and set nearly at right angles to the petiole, mostly 1-4 dm long and about as wide, or wider, reniform-orbicular when well developed, subequally forked at the top of the petiole into 2 recurved- spreading rachises that bear 2-several progressively shorter pinnae along the outside of the curve; larger pinnae with mostly 15-35 alternate, short-stalked, widely spreading pinnules on each side of the costa; pinnules 12-22 נ5-9 mm, obliquely oblong, the midrib near the lower margin, which is entire and straight or concave, the upper (distal) margin more convex, lobulate, and bearing the oblong indusial flaps; 2n=58, 116. Moist Woods and streamsides in circumneutral soil, and on serpentine slopes at scattered stations from Nf. to Vt.; Nf. to Alas. and adj. Asia, s. to Ga., La., Okla., and Calif. Most e. Amer. plants belong to the nomenclaturally typical phase of the sp.; serpentine plants from both e. and w. N. Amer. tend to have fewer and smaller pinnae and have been segregated as subsp. calderi Cody.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Adiantum pedatum
Open Interactive Map
Adiantum pedatum image
Paul Rothrock
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Liz Makings
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Adiantum pedatum image
Click to Display
100 Initial Images
- - - - -
View All Images

The PCC, and this data portal, were made possible by funding from the National Science Foundation’s Advancing Digitization of Biological Collections (ADBC) program, grant numbers 1802504, 1802352, 1802134, 1802033, 1802270, 1802255, 1802239, 1802446, 1802305.
The pteridoportal taxonomic thesaurus is based on the Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World, generously provided by Michael Hassler.