Adiantum vivesii

Adiantum vivesii
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pteridophyta
Class: Pteridopsida
Order: Polypodiales
Family: Pteridaceae
Subfamily: Vittarioideae
Genus: Adiantum
Species: A. vivesii
Binomial name
Adiantum vivesii
Proctor 1989

Adiantum vivesii is a rare species of ferns known by the common name Puerto Rico maidenhair. It is in the maidenhair fern genus Adiantum,[1] in the Vittarioideae subfamily of the Pteridaceae.[2]

Distribution

Adiantum vivesii is endemic to Puerto Rico, where it is known from a single population made up of perhaps 1000 individuals near Quebradillas, in the San Juan – Caguas – Guaynabo metropolitan area on the northern side of the island.[3] The fern was discovered in 1985 and described to science as a new species in 1989.[4] Soon after, it was listed as an endangered species. It is a putative hybrid between Adiantum obliquum and A. tetraphyllum. In 2003 a specimen that most likely represents this species was collected on Petit Morne in Martinique by botanist Maarten Christenhusz collection number 2678 (BM, SP, TUR, U, UC), which means that the hybrid has occurred twice independently.

Single population — sterile hybrid

In 2000, a student at the University of Puerto Rico published a master's thesis detailing her studies of the rare fern. She had carefully dug around most of the single population and discovered it was actually one individual connected by a long rhizome.[3] The fern produces spores but no gametophytes and there were no new, small individuals in the vicinity; the student concluded that the fern does not undergo sexual reproduction, only vegetative reproduction, sprouting up from its extensive rhizome.[3]

Evidence supports the conclusion that the fern is one plant that is a sterile hybrid of two common fern species, and as it does not reproduce but only increases in size by resprouting, it is not a valid species in its own right.[3] Therefore, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service recommends it be removed from the endangered species list.[5] As of 2011 it is still on the list.

References


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