Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Polypodium glycyrrhiza

Polypodium glycyrrhiza D. C. Eaton   (redirected from: Polypodium vulgare subsp. occidentale (Hook.) Hultén)
Family: Polypodiaceae
Licorice Fern
[Polypodium occidentale (Hook.) Maxon, morePolypodium vulgare subsp. occidentale (Hook.) Hultén, Polypodium vulgare var. commune Milde, Polypodium vulgare var. occidentale Hook.]
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Paul Rothrock
  • FNA
  • Resources
Christopher H. Haufler
Michael D. Windham
Frank A. Lang
S. A. Whitmore in Flora of North America (vol. 2)
Stems not whitish pruinose, slender to moderately stout, to 6 mm diam., intensely sweet, licorice-flavored; scales concolored, brown or slightly darker near point of attachment, lanceolate to lanceolate-ovate, symmetric, margins entire. Leaves to 75 cm. Petiole usually slender, 0.5--2 mm diam. Blade lanceolate-ovate to oblong, pinnatifid, widest near middle or just below, to 16 cm wide, herbaceous, rarely slightly leathery; rachis sparsely scaly to glabrescent abaxially, puberulent adaxially; scales linear, usually less than 3 cells wide. Segments linear to oblong, less than 12 mm wide; margins serrate; apex acute to attenuate; midrib puberulent adaxially. Venation free. Sori midway between margin and midrib or slightly closer to midrib, usually less than 3 mm diam., circular to oval when immature. Sporangiasters absent. Spores less than 58 µm, verrucose, with surface projections less than 3 µm. 2 n = 74.

Sporulating late fall--spring. Cliffs and rocky slopes along coasts, often epiphytic; on a variety of substrates; 0--700 m.; B.C., Yukon; Alaska, Calif., Idaho, Oreg., Wash.; Asia in Kamchatka in the former Soviet republics.

Polypodium glycyrrhiza hybridizes with P . calirhiza and with P . hesperium to produce sterile triploids with misshapen spores. Polypodium glycyrrhiza was involved in the origin of both of these allotetraploid species, and some individuals can be difficult to identify. Free versus anastomosing venation distinguishes this species from P . calirhiza ; the presence of adaxial hairs on the rachis separates it from P . hesperium . An additional character for distinguishing these taxa is spore length, which is less than 58 µm in diploid P . glycyrrhiza and more than 58 µm in the two tetraploid species. Reports of P . glycyrrhiza occurring in Arizona (T. Reeves 1981; D. B. Lellinger 1985) are based on misidentified specimens.

Polypodium glycyrrhiza
Open Interactive Map
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Anthony Mendoza
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
University of Florida Herbarium
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
University of Florida Herbarium
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
University of Florida Herbarium
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
University of Florida Herbarium
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Polypodium glycyrrhiza image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.