TREATMENT FROM THE JEPSON MANUAL (1993) |
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©Copyright 1993 by the Regents of the University of California
For up-to-date information about California vascular plants, visit the Jepson eFlora. |
AND IS MAINTAINED FOR ARCHIVAL PURPOSES ONLY |
Perennial, in soil or on or among rocks; rhizome creeping to erect, scaly
Leaves generally all ± alike (or of 2 kinds, fertile and sterile), generally < 50 cm, often < 25 cm; petiole generally thin, wiry, often dark, in transverse section with vascular strands generally 13, less often many in a circle; blade generally pinnate or ± palmate-pinnate (see Adiantum ), often 2 or more compound, lower surface often with glands, ± powdery exudate, hairs, or scales; segments round, oblong, fan-shaped, or otherwise, veins generally free
Sporangia in sori or not, marginal, submarginal, or along veins, sometimes covered by recurved, often modified segment margins (false indusia); true indusia 0; spores spheric, sides sometimes flat, scar with 3 radiating branches
Genera in family: ± 40 genera, 500 species: worldwide, especially dry areas. Definition of Cheilanthes and related genera problematic; traditional limits often untenable.
Plant in soil or rock crevices; rhizome short- to long-creeping-decumbent, generally many-branched, scales generally linear-lanceolate, pale to dark, with darker mid-stripe or not
Leaf < 75 cm; petiole cylindric, reddish brown to blackish; blade generally 23-pinnate, generally oblong to narrowly triangular; segments generally small, ± flat or lower side concave (from recurved margins)
Sporangia along margin, in discrete patches to continuous, partly to completely covered by recurved margin (generally not recurved in C. cooperae)
Species in genus: 150+ species: generally Am, generally dry areas
Etymology: (Greek: lip flower, from location of sporangia)
Horticultural information: DFCLT.
Native |
Rhizome short-creeping; scales lanceolate, tan to reddish brown
Leaf 625(32+) cm, 36(8+) cm wide, pale green; scales 0; hairs generally spreading, generally glandular; petiole < 2 mm wide; segments generally 13 mm, ± oblong, ± flat
Sporangia submarginal, not obscured by hairs; segment margins unmodified, not (rarely slightly) recurved; spores tan
Chromosomes: 2n=60
Ecology: Generally in limestone crevices
Elevation: 100800 m.
Bioregional distribution: Inner North Coast Ranges, Cascade Range, Sierra Nevada, San Francisco Bay Area, Outer South Coast Ranges, South Coast (Slover Mtn, San Bernardino Co.), Transverse Ranges.