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  2. Diphasiastrum digitatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diphasiastrum_digitatum

    The spores repel water and have been used as a powder on skin rashes and even on baby bottoms, and to treat wounds. Spores have been used historically as coating for pills, and in the Americas and Europe as fabric dyes. Spores are also highly flammable due to their high content of oil.

  3. Zealandia pustulata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zealandia_pustulata

    Zealandia pustulata is a species of fern native to eastern Australia and New Zealand. [2] It is commonly referred to as 'kangaroo fern' or 'kangaroo paw fern' as its native range includes Australia and the shape of its mature foliage tends to resemble the shape of a kangaroo's foot.

  4. Platycerium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platycerium

    Fertile fronds bear spores on their undersurface, are dichotomous or antler-shaped, and jut out or hang from the rhizome. The spores are borne in sporangia , clustered in large sori that are usually positioned on the tips of the lobes, on a specialized stalked lobe (as in P. ridleyi and P. coronarium ), or at the sinus between frond lobes.

  5. Lygodium palmatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lygodium_palmatum

    Lygodium palmatum is the only species of its genus native to North America.Unlike most species in the genus, this one, called the American climbing fern, [2] Hartford fern (after Hartford, Connecticut), or Alice's fern, is extremely hardy in temperate zones (other species tolerant of temperate climates include New Zealand's Lygodium articulatum and the Japanese Lygodium japonicum, which is now ...

  6. Pteridophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pteridophyte

    The term "fern ally" included under Pteridophyta generally refers to vascular spore-bearing plants that are not ferns, including lycopods, horsetails, whisk ferns and water ferns (Marsileaceae, Salviniaceae and Ceratopteris). This is not a natural grouping but rather a convenient term for non-fern, and is also discouraged, as is eusporangiate ...

  7. Osmundastrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmundastrum

    The fertile leaves appear first; their green color slowly becomes brown as the season progresses and the spores are dropped. The spore-bearing stems persist after the sterile fronds are killed by frost, until the next season. The spores must develop within a few weeks or fail. The Osmundastrum cinnamomeum fern forms huge clonal colonies in ...

  8. Ptisana salicina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptisana_salicina

    Ptisana salicina, or king fern, is a species of fern native to Norfolk Island, New Zealand and the South Pacific. Large and robust with a distinctive tropical appearance, it has fronds up to 5 metres (16 feet +/-) tall that arise from a starchy base that was a traditional food for the Maori. [ 2 ]

  9. Polysporangiophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polysporangiophyte

    The reconstruction shows horizontal and upright stem-like structures; no leaves or roots are present. The upright stems or axes branch dichotomously and have pairs of spore-forming organs attached to them. Cross-sections of the upright axes showed that vascular tissue was present. He later described other specimens.