Campyloneurum C.Presl

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Campyloneurum C.Presl

Descripción

Rhizomes shortto long-creeping; rhizome scales concolorous, brownish, often clathrate, surface glabrous, margins entire; fronds clumped to distant, monomorphic, sessile to long-stipitate, narrowly linear to elliptic, attenuate at apices and bases, articulate on phyllopodia; margins entire, modified; blades thin to usually thick, simple (in ours, rarely pinnate in a few extraterritorial species), glabrous (or sparingly hairy in a few extraterritorial spp.); venation areolate with 1 to usually several or many rows of areoles formed by anastomosing cross-veins from main lateral veins, the crossveins producing 2 (or sometimes more) excurrent, simple, free veins, a third excurrent vein sometimes completely bisecting the areole; sori round, exindusiate, non-paraphysate, at ends of free included veins, usually in 2 (to ca. 4) rows between main lateral veins; sporangia glabrous; spores bilateral, verrucate with spherical deposits; x=37.A

Forma de vida

Terrestre, Epífita or epipetric.A

Forma de crecimiento

Hierba

Nutrición

Autotrófica

Distribución

México (Country) native and not endemicB

Elevación

Tipo de vegetación

No especificado

Categoría IUCN

No incluidaC

Categoría NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010

No incluidaD

Estatus del taxón

(A) Como definida actualmente, probablemente una entidad natural (monofilética)

Discusión taxonómica

Campyloneurum is now usually segregated from Polypodium s.l. and includes approximately 50 neotropical species. It is characterized by the monomorphic, simple leaves (two species in South America are 1-pinnate), non-paraphysate sori borne on the free included vein tips, and usually clathrate, glabrous rhizome scales. There have been recent attempts at revision (Lellinger, 1988; León, 1992), but the genus is still inadequately understood. We depart in some respects from the circumscriptions adopted in both of those treatments, in particular with the species C. angustifolium and C. serpentinum.
Several species, including C. phyllitidis, C. repens, and C. xalapense in Mexico, have been reported as having nectaries on the abaxial side of the blades (Mickel & Beitel, 1988; León, 1992). These occur at the juncture of the midribs and the main lateral veins, and apparently exude sugars. Whether there is regular ant association in Campyloneurum, as reported in some polypodiaceous ferns (Koptur et al., 1982), is unknown.
Campyloneurum, including the two 1-pinnate species mentioned above (these excluded by Lellinger, 1988), is monophyletic and clearly allied to a large clade of other New World Polypodiaceae (Haufler, unpubl. data; Schneider et al., 2003), most especially to Niphidium and then to Microgramma. Nearly all species in this clade are simple-bladed. Species of Campyloneurum occupy an unusually wide variety of habitats, from sea level to above 4000 meters in paramo vegetation; species can be terrestrial, epipetric, or epiphytic.

Excluded Species
Campyloneurum aphanophlebium (Kunze) T. Moore [syn.: C. Occultum (Christ) L. D. Gómez]. See comments under C. serpentinum.
A

Bibliografía

A. Mickel, J. T. & Smith, A. R. 2004: The Pteridophytes of Mexico Vol. 88
B. Mickel, J. T. & Smith, A. R. 2004: The Pteridophytes of Mexico Vol. 88
C. IUCN 2022: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Versión 2022-2
D. SEMARNAT 2019: MODIFICACIÓN del Anexo Normativo III, Lista de especies en riesgo de la Norma Oficial Mexicana NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010: 101 pp. – https://www.dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5578808&fecha=14/11/2019#gsc.tab=0 [accessed 2023-05-04 06:16]