Blechnum fluviatile

Blechnum fluviatile
Blechnum fluviatile(Māori: kiwikiwi)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pteridophyta
Class: Polypodiopsida /
Pteridopsida (disputed)
Order: Athyriales
Family: Blechnaceae
Genus: Blechnum
Species: B. fluviatile
Binomial name
Blechnum fluviatile
(R.Br.) Lowe ex Salomon

Blechnum fluviatile is a fern known in the Māori language as kiwikiwi. A herbaceous plant, B. fluviatile is a "hard fern" of the Blechnum genus in the Blechnaceae family. It was identified by Patrick Brownsey in 1979.[1] Other common names are star fern, creek fern, kawakawa and kiwakiwa.[2][1]

Morphology

Ladderlike fronds of B. fluviatile measure up to 50 cm (20 in) long. Growing in a distinctive ground-hugging rosette shape, its fertile fronds – dark brown and spiky – stand upright from the centre, while the drooping sterile fronds with their nearly round leaflets, form the rosette.[2] As the parent plant ages it develops a short trunk central to a surrounding colony.

Range and ecology

The hardy B. fluviatile requires moist, shaded conditions for optimal growth. A small ground fern, the B. fluviatile is native to New Zealand and southeast Australia, a syntype common throughout the country in damp, shady areas in acidic, moist and boggy soil,[3] beside streams in forest areas.[2] This fern species occurs throughout much of New Zealand's forests, including much of the forested area of North Island; west, north and south coasts of South Island; and Stewart Island/Rakiura; moreover, it occurs in parts of the coastal forests of southeast Australia. Example understory flora associates in the mixed broadleaf/podocarp forests of Rakiura include Blechnum blechnoides and Blechnum durum.[4]

History

It was collected by William Colenso in December 1841, at the precise locality of woods near Poverty Bay in the North Island.[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/21/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.