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Asplenium scolopendrium var. americanum (Fern.) Kartesz & Gandhi  
Family: Aspleniaceae
[Asplenium scolopendrium var. lindenii (Hook.) Viane, Rasbach & Reichst., morePhyllitis fernaldiana A. Löve, Phyllitis japonica subsp. americana (Fern.) Á.Löve & D.Löve, Phyllitis lindenii (Hook.) Maxon, Phyllitis scolopendrium var. americanum Fern., Phyllitis scolopendrium var. lindenii (Hook.) Fern., Scolopendrium lindenii Hook.]
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Warren H. Wagner Jr.
Robbin C. Moran
Charles R. Werth in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Roots not proliferous. Stems erect, unbranched; scales brown, lanceolate, 3--6 × 1--1.5 mm, margins entire. Leaves monomorphic. Petiole brown to straw-colored, dull, 3--10 cm, 1/8--1/4 length of blade; indument of brown, narrowly lanceolate scales. Blade linear, simple, 8--35 × 2--4.5 cm, thick, papery, nearly glabrous; base cordate; margins entire; apex acuminate, not rooting. Rachis brown proximally, straw-colored distally, dull, glabrous. Veins free, obscure. Sori numerous, perpendicular to rachis, or nearly so, usually restricted to distal 1/2 of blade. Spores 64 per sporangium. Usually 2 n = 144. On calcareous rocks in sinkholes, at cave entrances, and on cool, moist talus, always in deep shade; 0--100 m; Ont.; Ala., Mich., N.Y., Tenn.; Mexico in Nuevo León. Asplenium scolopendrium is rare and has a spotty distribution in North America. Consequently, when new populations are found, they receive considerable attention from pteridologists. The American variety was distinguished from the European plants by M. L. Fernald (1935, pp. 220--221) on the basis of their smaller leaves, narrower scales with longer, attenuate tips, more promptly glabrate midribs, and blades tending to bear sori in the distal half rather than the entire length. In addition, M. L. Arreguín-Sánchez and R. Aguirre-Claverán (1986, pp. 400, 402) listed two differences in perispore morphology of the two varieties; they did not say how many specimens were studied. The most clear-cut difference is that the American plants are tetraploid and the European plants are diploid (D. M. Britton 1953), a difference insufficient for recognition of this taxon at specific rank (W. H. Wagner Jr. 1955b). More work is needed to determine if Asplenium scolopendrium var. lindenii (Hooker) Viane, Rasbach, & Reichstein, which occurs in southern Mexico (Oaxaca and Chiapas) and Hispaniola, is distinguishable from var. americanum .

Asplenium scolopendrium var. americanum
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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.