Dryopteris affinis
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Dryopteris affinis | ||||||||||||||
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Dryopteris affinis (Lowe) Fraser-Jenk. |
Dryopteris affinis (Scaly Male Fern; syn. D. pseudomas, D. borreri) is fern native to western and southern Europe and southwestern Asia. It is most abundant in areas with high humidity, such as the British Isles and western France; in the Mediterranean region and the Caucasus it is confined to high altitudes. It commonly grows on moist soils in woodlands.
The dark green fronds are 60-160 cm long, moderately stiff and hard-textured, bipinnate, with the pinnae opposite on the rachis; the rachis at the base of the frond is densely covered in yellow-brown scales. Each pinna is 8-18 cm long, the pinnules broad rectangular with a slightly serrated margin, and decreasing in size only close to the pinna tip. Individual fronds live for about 1.5 years and remain attached to the rhizome after withering. It is closely related to Dryopteris filix-mas, distinguished by its usually more robust habit with usually more evergreen fronds, the more densely scaly frond stems, and the more rectangular (less tapered and lobed) pinnae and pinnules.
It is one of the larger European native ferns, with older specimens developing a dense, almost tree fern-like base up to 20-30 cm high and 30-40 cm broad.
[edit] References
- Flora Europaea: Dryopteris affinis
- Hyde, H. A., Wade, A. E., & Harrison, S. G. (1978). Welsh Ferns. National Museum of Wales.