Cheilanthoideae

Subfamily of ferns From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cheilanthoideae is one of the five subfamilies of the fern family Pteridaceae.[1][2] The subfamily is understood to be monophyletic, but some of the genera as currently defined are not. Most species are xeric-adapted, and the subfamily is most diverse in dry areas.

Quick facts Scientific classification, Genera ...
Cheilanthoideae
Myriopteris parryi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Division: Polypodiophyta
Class: Polypodiopsida
Order: Polypodiales
Family: Pteridaceae
Subfamily: Cheilanthoideae
W.C.Shieh
Genera

See text.

Synonyms

Cheilanthaceae B.K.Nayar

Close

Phylogenic relationships

The following phylogram shows a likely relationship between Cheilanthoideae and the other Pteridaceae subfamilies.[3]

Pteridaceae

Cryptogrammoideae

Parkerioideae (syn. Ceratopteridoideae)

Pteridoideae

Vittarioideae

Cheilanthoideae

Although subfamily Cheilanthoideae itself is thought to be monophyletic, many of the genera into which it has been divided (including Cheilanthes, Doryopteris, Notholaena, and Pellaea) have been shown to be polyphyletic.[4]

Genera

The following genera of Cheilanthoideae are recognized by the Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World, which incorporates the arrangements of the hemionitid ferns published in Schuettpelz et al. 2025.[5] That arrangement separated a number of genera from Cheilanthes s.l. and Pellaea s.l., and subsumed Mildella and Oeosporangium, formerly a Eurasian segregate of Cheilanthes, under Aleuritopteris.

Some other genera that have been included in the subfamily (or split off from genera included in the subfamily) are:[1][2][5]

  • Allosorus Bernh. (nom. rej.) – not included by Christenhusz et al. (2011); accepted in PPG I. The type was subsequently discovered to belong to Cryptogramma and the name has been formally suppressed.
  • Mickelopteris Fraser-Jenk. – rendered unnecessary by conservation of Asplenium arifolium as a new type, so now a synonym of Parahemionitis.
  • Mildella Trev. – subsumed in Aleuritopteris by Schuettpelz et al.
  • Oeosporangium Vis. – considered a synonym of Allosorus in PPG I, subsequently accepted for a group of largely European species and then subsumed in Aleuritopteris by Schuettpelz et al.
  • Pteridella Mett. ex Kuhn – accepted by Christenhusz & Chase (2014);[6] considered a synonym of Pellaeopsis by World Ferns.
  • Sericopteris Jing Zhao, X.M.Zhou & Z.R.He – published in 2025 to resolve the polyphyly of Paragymnopteris

Other sources take a radically different approach. As of October 2025, Plants of the World Online places all of the possible genera of the Cheilanthoideae in the single genus Hemionitis.[7]

While much work remains to be done in delineating monophyletic genera in the cheilanthoids (Cheilanthes, Doryopteris and Pellaea remaining notably polyphyletic), several major clades have been consistently recovered in phylogenetic analyses and given informal names, as shown here:

cheilanthoids
"ludens clade"

Calciphilopteris

bommeriids

Baja, Bommeria

"skinneri clade"

Ynesmexia

notholaenids

Cheilanthes leucopoda, Cheiloplecton, Notholaena

hemionitids

Adiantopsis, Aleuritopteris, Anthonya, Aspidotis, Brasiliopteris, Carlottahallia, Cheilanthes, Choristosoria, Christenhuszia, Doryopteris, Estrella, Gaga, Hemionitis, Lytoneuron, Mineirella, Namaquapteris, Ormopteris, Paragymnopteris, Parahemionitis, Pellaeopsis, Pentagramma, Quechuapteris, Trachypteris

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI