Diplazium australe
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| Diplazium australe | |
|---|---|
| Austral lady fern | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Division: | Polypodiophyta |
| Class: | Polypodiopsida |
| Order: | Polypodiales |
| Suborder: | Aspleniineae |
| Family: | Athyriaceae |
| Genus: | Diplazium |
| Species: | D. australe |
| Binomial name | |
| Diplazium australe | |
| Synonyms | |
| |
Diplazium australe, commonly known as the Austral lady fern, is a small fern occurring in eastern Australia, New Zealand and Norfolk Island. The habitat is moist shaded areas, often occurring in rainforest.[1]
Diplazium australe is an Australian fern belonging to the thyme family, a distinct genus of the female fern family Athyriaceae, consisting of approximately 350–400 species. According to the research, there are more than 70% and 25% of species in the subtropical and neotropical regions, respectively, while only 5% in Africa.[2] According to the study, the crown group of Diplazium originated in Eurasia and completed the initial diversification in the northern hemisphere.[2] The distribution of Diplazium australe is Wet Tropics, Eungella and subtropical and temperate eastern Australia, also in New Zealand. It's terrestrial in shaded gullies in wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest.
The North and South Islands of New Zealand (though it is mostly absent from the drier eastern side of both islands, reaching its apparent southern limits in the west near Greymouth and in the east in the Marlborough Sounds) Norfolk Island, as well as Australia (eastern Queensland, eastern New South Wales, southern Victoria, and Tasmania). Diplazium australe reproduces by spores, and it is precisely because of the long-distance transmission of spores that the population of Diplazium australe is generally dispersed geographically. Allantodia australis R.Br., Athyrium australe (R.Br.) C.Presl; Athyrium umbrosum subp. australe (R.Br.) C.Chr. Athyrium umbrosum var. australe (R.Br.) Domin; Athyrium brownii (J.Sm.) J.Sm.; Athyrium umbrosum sensu G.
Basic information
Diplazium australe is a synonym of Athyrium australe and Allantodia australis. It is a member of the Athyriaceae family, is 0.5–2m tall, and does not flower. On the lateral veins, sporozoites are frequently found in pairs, are oblong, and are covered by a swelling membrane.[3]
Small streams and wet settings, such as moist humus-rich soils in moist forests and moist ravines in tropical rain forests, support the growth of this plant.[3] The habitat is wet shady regions, which are frequently seen in rainforests. Austral Lady Fern is the popular name for this plant. Tufted ferns on the ground (often deciduous in cooler areas). Rhizome up to 80 mm long, with a slender, woody caudex that is first coated in dull dark brown to black scales. Fronds are arcuate, glabrous, membranous, brittle, dark green, with rachis grooves that open at junctions with pinna midrib grooves. Stipe 150–800 mm long, deeply 3-grooved, black and scaly at the base. 3-pinnate, widely deltoid lamina, 0.25–1.2 0.2–0.9 m Pinnules are 5-252-10 mm long, rectangular, and have a wide base connected to the axis. The edges are bluntly serrated or shallowly lobed less than half-way to the costule, abaxially decurrent, and the apex is obtuse. Sori 2–3 mm long, 3–5 per pinnule, elongated along one side of a vein, generally solitary, but occasionally paired along both sides; indusium pale brown, elongated, connected to vein on one side, free edge serrated, brittle.[4] Alluvial forest, river flats, gullies, and swamp forest are abundant in coastal, lowland, and montane wooded ecosystems. It's common to find it on a rocky pasture or under willows. Frequently encountered in metropolitan settings. Diplazium australe is also a vascular plant whose survival period is often referred to as alternation of generations, characterized by diploid sporophyte and haploid gametophyte stages. Its life cycle includes:
- The sporophyte stage (diploid) stage produces haploid spores by meiosis.
- Spores form gametophytes through cell division, gametophytes are usually heart-shaped structures, 2–3 mm wide, with root-like hairs on the surface.
- Gametophytes produce gametes through mitosis
- Mirrors with movable flagella fertilize eggs attached to prothallus
- The fertilized egg is a diploid zygote and grows into a sporophyte through mitosis.
