Dryopteris cristata
Species of fern
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dryopteris cristata is a perennial species of fern native to wetlands throughout the Northern Hemisphere. It is known as crested wood fern,[3] crested buckler-fern[4] or crested shieldfern.[1] This plant is a tetraploid species of hybrid origin, one parent being Dryopteris ludoviciana and the other being the unknown, apparently extinct species, dubbed Dryopteris semicristata, which is also one of the presumed parents of Dryopteris carthusiana. D. cristata in turn is one of the parents of Dryopteris clintoniana, another fern of hybrid origin.
| Dryopteris cristata | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Division: | Polypodiophyta |
| Class: | Polypodiopsida |
| Order: | Polypodiales |
| Suborder: | Polypodiineae |
| Family: | Dryopteridaceae |
| Genus: | Dryopteris |
| Species: | D. cristata |
| Binomial name | |
| Dryopteris cristata | |
| Synonyms[2] | |
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List
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The crested wood fern is a wetland plant, needing year-round moisture. The fronds often grow quite tall, up to a meter or more in height, but are extremely narrow under most conditions.
This plant is toxic.[5]
Description
The plant is upright-ish, growing in leaf bunches, slightly leathery leaved and dark green. It has a short rootstock. The 20–30 cm leaves grow in upright sparse-ish bunches. The leaves without sporangium survive over winter. The leaf-stalk is about half the leaf blade with light-brown scales. The leaves with sporangium are longer with narrowly ovate leaf blades, usually only once bipinnate. The leaflets are ovate and pinnately lobed.[5]