Prodromus of a fern flora for Bolivia. XXXVII. Nephrolepidaceae
Author
Smith, Alan R.
University Herbarium, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Bldg. # 2465, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 - 2465
Author
Kessler, Michael
Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH- 8008 Zurich, Switzerland
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-01-16
334
2
135
140
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.334.2.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.334.2.3
1179-3163
13721390
Nephrolepis biserrata
(Sw.) Schott, Gen. Fil.
t. 3. 1834.
Range:
—Florida; Antilles; southern
Mexico
to
Bolivia
(BE, CO, LP, PA, SC) and
Brazil
; Africa; Asia; Polynesia.
Ecology:
—Fairly common; epiphytic, terrestrial, and saxicolous, often along roadsides, in secondary growth, and along forests borders, sometimes growing in leaf axils of palms, in humid regions; to
500 m
.
Notes:
—A variable and pantropical species, with more than 25 heterotypic synonyms listed by
Hovenkamp & Miyamoto (2005)
. Rhizomes and petiole bases with spreading, concolorous scales
5–7 mm
long; blades (11)
16–30 cm
wide, to
3 m
long, abaxially with hairs
0.2–0.6 mm
long; costae adaxially with dense, catenate hairs
0.1–0.5 mm
long; indusia round-reniform with occasional hairs. The species may be a complex, even in
Bolivia
, with typical
N. biserrata
having mostly (entirely) segmented hairs abaxially, and another variant with few hairs but sparse to moderately dense scales. However, a sampling of specimens from five localities (
Bolivia
,
Comores
,
Sudan
, and
Indonesia
) by
Hennequin
et al.
(2010)
showed the species to be monophyletic. The
type
of
N. biserrata
is from
Mauritius
.
A recent collection from Dept.
La Paz
,
Gonzales 4875
(UC), deviates from the pantropical
N. biserrata
and all other specimens from
Bolivia
in several seemingly significant characters: blade scales lacking on the costae and rachises, and long-septate hairs present on both sides of the costae, and between veins abaxially. The much more common and typical form of this species in
Bolivia
and elsewhere has scales along the costae abaxially, often lacks hairs between veins abaxially, and lacks or has sparse hairs on the costae adaxially. These two forms may be specifically different, but in the absence of more detailed morphological and molecular studies in
Nephrolepis
, which must be broadly based (a range of specimens from throughout the Americas and beyond), we refrain from giving this a name. The type of
N. mollis
Rosenst.
, from
Costa Rica
(
Brade & Brade 141
,
isotype
UC!), appears to match the hairy, scaleless variant of this species, as does
Sieber
, Syn. Fil. 35, UC, from
Mauritius
.
In an analysis by
Yahaya
et al
. (2016)
, using both chloroplast and nuclear markers,
N. biserrata
was not monophyletic, but some populations of this species from
Malaysia
,
Malesia
, and Africa show a sister relationship to a complex of clades comprising elements identified as
N. brownii
,
N. exaltata
, other populations of
N. biserrata
, and several other Old World species.