Lomariopsis Fée

Primary tabs

Lomariopsis Fée

Descripción

Rhizomes long-creeping, dorsiventral, climbing, scaly; fronds holodimorphic; stipes scaly; sterile blades 1-pinnate, terminal pinna conform (ours) or abortive with articulate lateral pinna acting as false terminal pinna; pinnae articulate; rachises alate or not; juvenile fronds with more deeply toothed pinnae (rachises more broadly alate); veins free, simple to forking; fertile blades much constricted, laminar tissue greatly reduced, pinnae linear, articulate, stalked or not; sori acrostichoid, exindusiate; spores bilateral, with broadly and irregularly winged, long-spinulose perispore; x=41 (lower nos. known in some African spp.).A

Forma de crecimiento

Hierba

Forma de vida

Hemiepiphytic. -no state-A

Nutrición

Autotrófica

Distribución

México (país) Nativo y no endémicoA

Elevación

data unavailable

Tipo de vegetación

No especificado

Categoría IUCN

No incluidaB

Categoría NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010

No incluidaC

Estatus del taxón

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

Discusión taxonómica

Lomariopsis is a pantropical genus of nearly 40 species, with about 15 in the American tropics (Moran, 2000). The genus is uncommon in Mexico, where it is found primarily in lowland Atlantic slopes. Three Mexican species are known, and a fourth, L. japurensis (Mart.) J. Sm., is to be expected, as it occurs from Guatemala and Belize to Bolivia, the Guianas, and Brazil. Lomariopsis japurensis differs from congeners in Mexico by the broader sterile pinnae, 3.5–6 cm wide, the generally fewer pinna pairs (5–14), and the ferrugineous rhizome apex and stipe base scales.
Affinities of Lomariopsis are generally with the dryopteroid ferns, but some systematists (e.g., Kramer in Kubitzki, 1990; Moran in Davidse et al., 1995; Moran, 2000) have treated Lomariopsis
in a family Lomariopsidaceae, along with Elaphoglossum and Bolbitis. Unpublished molecular data indicate that such a family is polyphyletic, and that the affinities of Lomariopsis may instead be with Cyclopeltis; the relationships of Elaphoglossum, Bolbitis, and other genera often treated in Lomariopsidaceae appear to lie elsewhere in the dryopteroid assemblage (Cranfill, pers. comm.).
Lomariopsis is distinct by its hemiepiphytic habit, dimorphic fronds, free veins, and acrostichoid sporangia. Plants begin life on the ground and climb trees, where greater light intensity towards the canopy seems to trigger the production of fertile fronds.

Excluded Species
Lomaria ? juglandifolia C. Presl, Rel. Haenk. 52. 1825. Type. Said to be from Mexico, but later (Epimel. Bot. 164. 1849 [1851]) emended to Luzon (Philippines). According to Holttum (Novit. Bot. Delect. Seminum Horti Bot. Univ. Carol. Prag. 1969: 14), this name is a synonym of Stenochlaena palustris (Burm.) Bedd.
Lomariopsis latiuscula (Maxon) Holttum was attributed to Mexico by A. F. Tryon and R. M. Tryon (1982: 611) on the basis of Dressler & Jones 142 (GH), from Veracruz. This specimen is L. recurvata. Lomariopsis latiuscula is a species of southern Central America (Nic, CR, Pan) and probably does not occur in Mexico. It was treated as a synonym of L. maxonii (Underw.) Holttum by Moran (in Davidse et al., 1995: 284; Moran, 2000).
A

Bibliografía

A. Mickel, J. T. & Smith, A. R. 2004: The Pteridophytes of Mexico Vol. 88
B. IUCN 2022: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Versión 2022-2
C. 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]