Small adder's-tongue fern facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Small adder's-tongue fern |
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Ophioglossum azoricum in coastal grassland, Dooncarton, Co. Mayo | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Genus: |
Ophioglossum
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Species: |
azoricum
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Synonyms | |
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Ophioglossum azoricum, the small adder's-tongue fern, is a small fern of the family Ophioglossaceae.
Distribution
Ophioglossum azoricum is an Atlantic-Mediterranean species native to islands in the northern Atlantic Ocean and adjacent western and southwestern Europe from Greenland, Iceland and the British Isles in the north, to Macaronesia and the Iberian Peninsula in the south. It also occurs in the Toscana region of Italy, Poland, the Czech Republic, and east to Cyprus, Turkey and Lebanon.
This species mostly occurs on bare or shortly vegetated ground on exposed coastal clifftops. An exception to this habitat preference is populations in the New Forest, Hampshire where plants occur in tightly grazed damp grassland in a non-maritime setting.
In Iceland, and Greenland, it is restricted to geothermal areas where higher temperatures allow its survival. This species is on the Icelandic list of endangered species.
Description
The frond of Ophioglossum azoricum consists of a single, pointed leaf blade and a narrow pointed spore-bearing spike on a stalk. The spike has about 4-18 segments on each side, each of which opens up when ripe to release spores. The sterile blades are broadest near the middle and taper towards both ends.
Taxonomy
This taxon is sometimes treated as a subspecies of Ophioglossum vulgatum, as Ophioglossum vulgatum ssp. ambiguum (Coss. & Germ.) E.F. Warburg.
This species is thought to be derived from a hybrid between Ophioglossum vulgatum and Ophioglossum lusitanicum.
This species has a chromosome number of 2n=c.480.