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
Cyclosorus interruptus (Willd.) H. Itô   (redirected from: Thelypteris interrupta (Willd.) Iwatsuki)
Family: Thelypteridaceae
[Aspidium aneitense Fourn., moreAspidium continuum Desv., Aspidium gongylodes Schkuhr, Aspidium lucens Boj. ex Kunze, Aspidium obtusatum Sw., Aspidium plantianum (Pappe & Raws.) Kuhn, Aspidium pohlianum Presl, Aspidium propinquum (R. Br.) Sw., Aspidium resiniferum Kaulf., Aspidium serra Schkuhr, Aspidium serratum Sw., Aspidium unitum var. glabrum Mett., Aspidium unitum var. hirsutum Mett., Aspidium venulosum Bl., Cyclosorus goggilodus , Cyclosorus goggilodus f. paucipilosus H. Itô, Cyclosorus gongylodes (Schkuhr) Link, Cyclosorus gongylodes var. glaber (Mett.) H.Itô, Cyclosorus gongylodes var. hirsutus (Mett.) Farw., Cyclosorus lenormandii (C. Chr.) Ching, Dryopteris gongylodes (Schkuhr) O. Kuntze, Dryopteris gongylodes subsp. propinqua (R. Br.) C. Chr., Dryopteris gongylodes var. glabra Mett. ex H. Itô, Dryopteris gongylodes var. hirsuta (Mett.) Bonap., Dryopteris gongylodes var. longipinnulata Bonap., Dryopteris gongylodes var. propinqua (R.Br.) Bonap., Dryopteris interrupta (Willd.) Ching, Dryopteris lenormandii C. Chr., Dryopteris propinqua (R. Br.) Gilib., Filix goggilodes (Schkuhr) Farw., Goniopteris cheilocarpa Fée, Goniopteris pennigera Presl, Hypopeltis marginifera Bory, Hypopeltis propinquoides Bory, Nephrodium aneitense (Fourn.) Bak., Nephrodium consanguineum Moore, Nephrodium contiguum Schott, Nephrodium continuum (Desv.) Desv., Nephrodium ecklonianum (Kunze) Pappe & Raws., Nephrodium ecklonii (Kunze) C. Presl, Nephrodium gongylodes (Schkuhr) Schott, Nephrodium gongylodes var. ecklonii (Kunze) Kümmerle, Nephrodium gongylodus (Schkuhr) Watts., Nephrodium inaequilaterum Col., Nephrodium lucens Boj., Nephrodium microcarpum Presl, Nephrodium paludosum Liebm., Nephrodium plantianum Pappe & Rawson, Nephrodium pohlianum (Presl) Presl, Nephrodium propinquum R. Br., Nephrodium pteroides (Retz.) Hook. & Bak., Nephrodium resiniferum (Kaulf.) Hook. & Arn., Nephrodium serratum Desv., Nephrodium unitum var. propinquum (R.Br.) Baker, Nephrodium venulosum Desv., Phymatodes secunda Presl, Polypodium pennigerum Presl, Polypodium secundum Ridl., Polystichum goggilodus (Schkuhr) Gaud., Polystichum propinquum (R. Br.) Gaud., Polystichum serratum (Sw.) Gaud., Pteris interrupta Willd., Thelypteris aneitensis (Fourn.) C. Reed, Thelypteris goggilodus (Schkuhr) Small, Thelypteris gongylodes (Schkuhr) K. Iwats., Thelypteris interrupta (Willd.) Iwatsuki, Thelypteris lenormandii (C.Chr) Christenh., Thelypteris totta f. paucipilosus (H. Itô) C.F. Reed, Thelypteris totta var. glabra (Mett. ex H. Itô) C.F.Reed, Thelypteris totta var. hirsuta (Mett.) C. V. Morton]
Cyclosorus interruptus image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Alan R. Smith in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Stems long-creeping, cordlike, 3--6 mm diam. Leaves monomorphic, evergreen, 3--6 cm apart, 50--150(--250) cm. Petiole straw-colored to tan, 20--125 cm × 3--6 mm, scaleless. Blade 30--125 cm, broadest at base, gradually narrowed distally to pinnatifid apex. Pinnae 7--30 × 1--2 cm, incised 1/3--1/2(--3/5) of width; segments deltate, rounded to acute; proximal pair of veins from adjacent segments united at acute or obtuse angle below sinus, with excurrent vein 2--4 mm. Indument abaxially of hairs 0.1--0.3 mm on costae and veins, or hairs often lacking, costae also with tan, ovate scales; veins, costules, and costae adaxially glabrous or sparsely pubescent; blade tissue without hairs on both sides, or hairy abaxially, usually with red to orange, shiny, sessile, hemispheric glands abaxially. Sori round, medial to supramedial; indusia tan, glabrous to hairy; sporangia with red- or orange-capped, stalked, globose glands arising from sporangial stalks. 2 n = 144. Wet roadside ditches, riverbanks, marshes, and cypress swamps; 0--50 m; Fla., La.; Mexico; West Indies in the Antilles; Central America; South America to Argentina; tropical and subtropical Asia, Africa. D. B. Lellinger (1985) applied the name Thelypteris interrupta to specimens from India, while using T . totta (type from South Africa) for North American and South American specimens. Diploid cytotypes are known from Africa and Asia, whereas all counts from the Neotropics are tetraploid. Until more counts are available and the morphologic variation (chiefly in glands, pubescence, and leaf size) in this species complex is better understood, I prefer to circumscribe the species broadly. R. E. Holttum (1982) circumscribed Cyclosorus (as a genus) to include this species and one or two others.

Cyclosorus interruptus
Open Interactive Map
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus image
Cyclosorus interruptus 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.