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
Sceptridium dissectum (Spreng.) Lyon  
Family: Ophioglossaceae
[Botrychium cuneatum Desv., moreBotrychium dissectum Spreng., Botrychium dissectum f. confusum (Wherry) E.A.Barthol., Botrychium dissectum f. dissectum , Botrychium dissectum f. elongatum (Gilbert & Haberer) Weath., Botrychium dissectum f. obliquum (Muhl.) Fern., Botrychium dissectum f. oblongifolium (E.W.Graves) M.Broun, Botrychium dissectum var. dissectum , Botrychium dissectum var. elongatum (Gilbert & Haberer) Farw., Botrychium dissectum var. obliquum (Muhl.) Clute, Botrychium fumarioides var. dissectum (Spreng.) Oakes, Botrychium lunarioides var. dissectum (Spreng.) A.Gray, Botrychium lunarioides var. obliquum (Muhl.) A.Gray, Botrychium obliquum Muhl. ex Willd., Botrychium obliquum f. confusum Wherry, Botrychium obliquum f. dissectum (Spreng.) Clute, Botrychium obliquum f. elongatum Gilbert & Haberer, Botrychium obliquum f. oblongifolium (E.W.Graves) Clute, Botrychium obliquum f. pennsylvanicum (E.W.Graves) Gruber, Botrychium obliquum var. dissectum (Spreng.) Prantl, Botrychium obliquum var. elongatum Gilbert & Haberer, Botrychium obliquum var. oblongifolium Clute, Botrychium obliquum var. pennsylvanicum E.W.Graves, Botrychium ternatum f. dissectum (Spreng.) Clute, Botrychium ternatum var. dissectum (Spreng.) D. C. Eat., Botrychium ternatum var. obliquum (Muhl.) D. C. Eat., Osmunda dissecta (Spreng.) Poir., Osmunda obliqua (Muhl.) Poir., Sceptridium dissectum var. obliquum (Muhl. ex Willd.) Mohlenbr., Sceptridium obliquum (Muhl.) Lyon, Sceptridium obliquum var. elongatum (Gilbert & Haberer) Lyon, Sceptridium ternatum var. dissectum (Spreng.) Clute]
Sceptridium dissectum image
Morton Arboretum
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Warren H. Wagner Jr.
Florence S. Wagner in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Trophophore stalk 3--15 cm, 1.5--2.5 times length of trophophore rachis; blade shiny green, often bronze in winter, plane to convex, 3--4-pinnate, to 20 Ă— 30cm, leathery. Pinnae to 10 pairs, approximate to remote, slightly ascending, distance between 1st and 2d pinnae not or slightly more than between 2d and 3d pairs, undivided except in proximal 2/3--3/4. Pinnules usually obliquely angular--trowel-shaped to widely trowel-shaped to obliquely round-lanceolate to ovate and pointed, margins denticulate to lacerate to coarsely cut halfway or wholly into linear-divergent segments in some populations, venation pinnate. Sporophores 2--3-pinnate, 1.5--2.5 times length of trophophore. 2 n =90. Leaves green over winter, new leaves appearing in late spring. In variety of habitats, open grassy areas to deep forest; 0--1500 m; N.B., N.S., Ont., Que.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Fla., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Miss., Mo., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Tex., Vt., Va., W.Va., Wis.; West Indies in the Antilles. Botrychium dissectum is highly variable, even within the same population. In Florida and along the Gulf Coast, the extremely lacerate form is absent, and the blade segments are usually strongly angular, trowel-shaped, and dentate. In eastern Kentucky and central Tennessee in forested valleys, on shale and limestone soils, plants have narrowly linear, somewhat blunt-tipped segments with a more or less whitish gray central line above the veins. This variant, which grows with B . dissectum , may deserve recognition as a distinct species.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Plants 10-30+ cm; bud pilose, its blade and sporophore reflexed; blade inframedial or nearly basal on an evident 3-7 cm stalk, somewhat coriaceous, persistent, often reddish when first expanding and tending to turn bronzy in autumn, mostly 3-4 times pinnate but highly variable, sometimes finely divided throughout, more often unequally dissected with the terminal segment of the principal divisions tending to be more elongate and less divided than the other segments; primary and secondary segments often crowded; ultimate segments mostly acute or acuminate, but with rounded or subtruncate base; fertile spike 2-10 cm, long-stalked; 2n=90. In a wide range of habitats; N.S. and N.B. to Wis. and se. Minn., s. to Fla. and La. Aug.-Nov. (B. d. var. obliquum, the more common phase with less strongly dissected lvs)

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.
Sceptridium dissectum
Open Interactive Map
Sceptridium dissectum image
Morton Arboretum
Sceptridium dissectum image
Morton Arboretum
Sceptridium dissectum image
Morton Arboretum
Sceptridium dissectum image
Morton Arboretum
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum image
Sceptridium dissectum 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.