Dennstaedtia distenta (Kunze) T.Moore
Descripción
Rhizomes long-creeping, unbranched, ca. 5 mm diam., bearing brown hairs; fronds 2–4 m long, clumped; stipes brown proximally, stramineous distally, glabrous, each with one bud at the base; blades deltate, 3–4-pinnate-pinnatifid; rachises stramineous; pinnae opposite or subopposite, sessile, with 1 pair of reduced pinnules at pinna bases; sterile vein tips not enlarged, ending well before the margins; abaxial surfaces with hairs 0.8–1 mm long, somewhat tortuous hairs on axes grading to clavate hairs 0.1 mm on laminae; vertical wings absent adaxially; indusia shallow, 0.1–0.3 mm deep, 0.5–0.8 mm wide; 2n=ca. 88 (Chis).A
Forma de vida
TerrestreA
Ejemplar revisado
Chih (Nesom & Vorobik 5598, MEXU, TEX). Chis (Breedlove 34619, NY). Dgo (Roberts & Keil 10239, NY). Gro (Hinton 14046, NY). Hgo (Rzedowski 32478, ENCB). Jal (Iltis & Guzmán M. 3174a, NY). Méx (Hinton 3748, NY). Mich (Rzedowski 42879, IEB). Mor (Hinton 17065, NY). Oax (Mickel 5011, NY). Pue (Herrera & Riba 3, MEXU). Qro (Rzedowski 46561, IEB). Sin (Gentry 7300, NY). Son (Gentry 1395, UC, US). Ver (Ventura A. 5186, NY).A
Elevación
1200 – 2300 mA
Ecología y Hábitat
Wooded banks, often near streams.A
Tipo de vegetación
Bosque de neblina/mesófiloA
Categoría IUCN
No incluidaB
Categoría NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010
No incluidaC
Discusión taxonómica
Dennstaedtia distenta is distinct from D. cicutaria by having sessile, nearly opposite, unreduced, proximal pinnae not reduced at pinna base, stramineous major axes, and monomorphic hairs on axes.
“Dennstaedtia mexicana Rosenstock” has never been effectively published but has been used for this species by some authors, e.g., Matuda, Anales Inst. Biol. Univ. Nac. México 27: 66. 1956. See note by Morton, Amer. Fern J. 48: 124. 1958.
A
“Dennstaedtia mexicana Rosenstock” has never been effectively published but has been used for this species by some authors, e.g., Matuda, Anales Inst. Biol. Univ. Nac. México 27: 66. 1956. See note by Morton, Amer. Fern J. 48: 124. 1958.
A