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
Polypodium appalachianum Haufler & Windham  
Family: Polypodiaceae
[Polypodium vulgare var. oreophilum Maxon]
Polypodium appalachianum image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Christopher H. Haufler
Michael D. Windham
Frank A. Lang
S. A. Whitmore in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Stems often whitish pruinose, slender, to 6 mm diam., acrid-tasting; scales concolored to weakly bicolored, uniformly golden brown or slightly darker near apex, lanceolate, contorted distally, margins denticulate. Leaves to 40 cm. Petiole slender, ± 1.5 mm diam. Blade elongate-deltate, rarely oblong, pinnatifid, usually widest at or near base, to 9 cm wide, herbaceous to somewhat leathery; rachis sparsely scaly to glabrescent abaxially, glabrous adaxially; scales lanceolate-ovate, usually more than 6 cells wide. Segments linear to oblong, less than 8 mm wide, margins entire to crenulate; apex acute to narrowly rounded; midrib glabrous adaxially. Venation free. Sori midway between margin and midrib to nearly marginal, less than 3 mm diam., circular when immature. Sporangiasters present, usually more than 40 per sorus, heads densely covered with glandular hairs. Spores less than 52 µm, verrucose, projections less than 3 µm tall. 2 n = 74. Sporulating summer--fall. Cliffs and rocky slopes; on a variety of substrates; 0--1800 m; N.B., Nfld., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que.; Ala., Conn., Del., D.C., Ga., Ky., Maine, Md., Mass., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va. Polypodium appalachianum is a newly recognized species traditionally identified as the diploid cytotype of P . virginianum (A. M. Evans 1971; I. Manton and M. Shivas 1953). Because the tetraploid cytotype is an allopolyploid (C. H. Haufler and Wang Z. R. 1991), and the type specimen of P . virginianum is tetraploid (R. Cranfill and D. M. Britton 1983), the diploid is recognized here as a distinct species, P . appalachianum . Some collections of P . appalachianum can be difficult to distinguish from P . virginianum , but the latter species has spores averaging more than 52 µm, and P . appalachianum has spores less than 52 µm. Frequent hybridization between P . appalachianum and P . virginianum forms morphologically intermediate, triploid individuals with misshapen spores. Particularly confusing is the frequent occurrence of the triploid sympatric with only one parent or with neither parent nearby.

Polypodium appalachianum
Open Interactive Map
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum image
Polypodium appalachianum 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.