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Family: Aspleniaceae
Wall-Rue
[Asplenium ruta-muraria var. subtenuifolium Christ] |
Roots not proliferous. Stems short-creeping to erect, often branched; scales very dark brown throughout, narrowly deltate, 1--3 × 0.1--0.25 mm, margins with widely spaced teeth. Leaves monomorphic. Petiole reddish brown proximally, green distally, dull, 1--9 cm, (1/2--)1--2 times length of blade; indument of dark brown, narrowly deltate scales proximally grading into multicellular hairs. Blade deltate-ovate to obovate or oblanceolate, 1--2(--3)-pinnate to 2-pinnate-pinnatifid, 2--6 × 1--4 cm, somewhat thick, glabrous; base obtuse; apex acute to rounded, not rooting. Rachis green, dull, glabrous except for very sparse, minute hairs. Pinnae in 2--4 pairs, deltate-ovate to obdeltate; proximal (largest) pinnae 7--30 × 5--20 mm; base truncate to acute; margins finely (sometimes coarsely) incised; apex rounded to acute. Veins free, evident. Sori as many as 30 or more per pinna, usually 1--5 per segment, on both basiscopic and acroscopic sides. Spores 64 per sporangium. 2 n = 144. Limestone (or calcareous shale) cliffs and boulders, rarely invading masonry; 0--1000 m; Ont., Que.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Ind., Ky., Md., Mass., Mich., Mo., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., R.I., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va.; Europe; e Asia. The relationship of North American Asplenium ruta-muraria to its European counterparts is incompletely understood and bears further investigation. Based on features of the stems, M. L. Fernald (1928) segregated the North American taxon as A . cryptolepis , but most current authors agree that morphologic differentiation of North American and European material is too slight and inconsistent for recognition at the specific level. In Europe, two ploidy levels are treated as subspecies, diploid A . ruta-muraria subsp. dolomiticum Lovis & Reichstein and tetraploid A . ruta-muraria subsp. ruta-muraria , the latter representing the most compelling case for true autopolyploidy (i.e., based on chromosomal homology) known in ferns (G. Vida 1970). Chromosome counts of North American plants are consistently tetraploid; whether or not these plants are referable to subsp. ruta-muraria will remain unclear until additional evidence (e.g., isozymes) is obtained. Meanwhile, North American material should be designated simply as A . ruta-muraria , the convention used in most current manuals. Although M. L. Fernald (1928) recognized Asplenium cryptolepis var. ohionis (= A . ruta-muraria var. subtenuifolium Christ), based on its acute rather than rounded segment apices, leaves assignable to this variety may occur on plants also bearing leaves more similar to those of the type variety (R. Cranfill 1980). The former is not recognized taxonomically here. Numerous hybrids of Asplenium ruta-muraria with various taxa are known from Europe (T. Reichstein 1981), but only three are known from North America, all exceedingly rare. These are the hybrids with A . rhizophyllum ( A . × inexpectatum ), with A . trichomanes ( A . × clermontae Syme), and with A . platyneuron ( A . × morganii ).
Rhizome 1.5-2 mm thick, the lanceolate scales 1.5-4 mm; lvs numerous, spreading, 4-17 cm, the petiole to 7 cm, green blade ovate or rhombic, firm, bipinnate or bipinnate- pinnatifid below, merely pinnate above, the rachis green; pinnae alternate, ca 6 pairs, long-petiolulate (petiolule 2-5 mm), the basal ones with 3-6 flabellate or rhombic, finely toothed and sometimes deeply lobed pinnules to 12 mm; 2n=144. Rock-crevices and ledges, mostly on limestone; interruptedly circumboreal, in Amer. from Mass. and Vt. to Mich., s. to Ala., Ill., Mo., and Ark. (A. cryptolepis, the Amer. pls.) Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp. ©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission. From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam My only specimens are from the rocks of the bluff of the Ohio River near Madison and in Clifty Falls State Park, Jefferson County. It was reported also from Clark and Floyd Counties by the editors of the Botanical Gazette in their list of the plants of Indiana, published in 1881. In 1939 R. M. Kriebel found it in the eastern part of Clark County. ...... Indiana Coefficient of Conservatism: C = 10 Wetland Indicator Status: n/a |