Didymochlaenaceae Ching ex Li Bing Zhang & Liang Zhang,, 2015
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.12705/641.4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6107238 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F587A6-825E-FFE3-FFBF-BA977092F81F |
treatment provided by |
Donat |
scientific name |
Didymochlaenaceae Ching ex Li Bing Zhang & Liang Zhang, |
status |
fam. nov. |
Didymochlaenaceae Ching ex Li Bing Zhang & Liang Zhang, fam. nov. – Type: Didymochlaena Desv.
Diagnosis. – Didymochlaenaceae are similar to Dryopte ridaceae in having rhizomes and petioles with scales, petioles with three or more vascular bundles arranged in a semicircle, perispores with tuberculate folds, and a chromosome number of x = 41, but Didymochlaenaceae have elongate sori, while Dryopteridaceae have rounded sori.
Terrestrial ferns with short, erect, subarborescent, dic- tyostelic rhizome bearing long, narrow and small, subentire, hairlike scales and ± persistent petiole bases. Leaves tufted, large, monomorphic, firmly herbaceous, longpetiolate. Petiole stramineous, at least the base ± persistently scaly, adaxially grooved, not articulated, with three or more vascular bundles arranged in a semicircle. Lamina bipinnate (Fig. 1 A), oblong ovate, anadromous or isodromous; neither upper nor lower pinnae reduced, apical pinna conform. Rachis and costa with very narrow scales, adaxially grooved. Pinnules dimidiate, somewhat rectangular, subsessile, at least the basal ones articu- lated at the base, apex rounded, basal margins thickened. Upper pinnules abruptly reduced and confluent. Midrib near the pos- terior margin or diagonal, weakly developed, not grooved. Lat- eral veins free, forked, with clavate ends before reaching sub entire to crenate margins (Figs. 1D, 2A–C). Sori ellipticoblong (Figs. 1B, 2A–G), terminating a vein, indusiate, often some- what sunken in blade, forming bumps on adaxial side (Fig. 1C); margins of fertile leaves often sterile. Indusia elongate, cen- trally attached along a line, opening on either side. Receptacle elongate, bearing sporangia on both sides and around its distal extremity. Sporangia longstalked (Fig. 2J). Spores monolete, ellipsoidal to globose, tuberculate and echinate on perispore (Fig. 1E). Chromosome number x = 41 (Manton, 1954; Smith & Foster, 1984; Walker, 1985).
A monogeneric family containing only one (Didymo- chlaena truncatula (Sw.) J.Sm.) or more species with nearly pantropical distribution, but not in Australia.
Both Hooker (1842: pl. 120) and Ching (1940) described the spores of Didymochlaena as trilete. Ching (1940) further reported that the spores have no perispores. These statements are incorrect (see our Fig. 1E).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.