- Hymenophyllum armstrongii
- Hymenophyllum australe
- Hymenophyllum bivalve
- Hymenophyllum cupressiforme
- Hymenophyllum demissum
- Hymenophyllum dilatatum
- Hymenophyllum flabellatum
- Hymenophyllum flexuosum
- Hymenophyllum frankliniae
- Hymenophyllum lyallii
- Hymenophyllum malingii
- Hymenophyllum minimum
- Hymenophyllum multifidum
- Hymenophyllum nephrophyllum
- Hymenophyllum peltatum
- Hymenophyllum pluviatile
- Hymenophyllum polyanthos
- Hymenophyllum pulcherrimum
- Hymenophyllum rarum
- Hymenophyllum revolutum
- Hymenophyllum rufescens
- Hymenophyllum sanguinolentum
- Hymenophyllum scabrum
- Hymenophyllum villosum
- = Cardiomanes C.Presl, Hymenophyllaceae 12 (1843)
Epiphytic, terrestrial or rupestral ferns. Rhizomes long-creeping or erect, usually filiform or wiry, nearly glabrous or bearing sparse multicellular hairs or occasionally densely hairy; roots few and fine. Fronds monomorphic. Laminae undivided to 5-pinnatifid, or flabellate, digitate (not NZ) or dichotomously divided, membranous and usually one cell thick or rarely 2–4 cells thick, often translucent, glabrous or hairy; margins entire or toothed, differentiated marginal cells sometimes forming a distinct border. Veins free. Sori terminating veins at margins of lamina. Indusia usually bivalvate or rarely urceolate, not widened at the mouth; receptacles usually included within indusial flaps, or rarely short-exserted. Spores trilete, radially symmetrical, papillate to echinate.
A genus of c. 330 species (Iwatsuki in Kramer & Green 1990) as defined by Ebihara et al. (2006).
The genus Hymenophyllum was re-defined by Ebihara et al. (2006) to include a number of taxa previously thought to belong in Trichomanes sens. lat. (notably Cardiomanes, Microtrichomanes and Pleuromanes). The Pacific species of the genus Hymenophyllum have been enumerated by Ebihara & Iwatsuki (2007) and Ebihara et al. (2010).
New Zealand species are assigned to the following subgenera:-
Subgenus Hymenophyllum: H. armstrongii, H. bivalve, H. cupressiforme, H. minimum, H. multifidum, H. peltatum, H. revolutum (7 species).
Subgenus Sphaerocionium: H. frankliniae, H. lyallii, H. malingii (3 species).
Subgenus Mecodium: H. polyanthos, H. rarum (2 species).
Subgenus Globosa: H. australe, H. demissum, H. flexuosum, H. pluviatile (4 species).
Subgenus Pleuromanes: H. flabellatum, H. rufescens (2 species).
Subgenus Myrmecostylum: H. sanguinolentum, H. scabrum, H. villosum (3 species).
Subgenus Fuciformia: H. pulcherrimum (1 species).
Subgenus Diploophyllum: H. dilatatum (1 species).
Subgenus Cardiomanes: H. nephrophyllum (1 species).
1 | Margins of ultimate lamina segments prominently toothed or spiny | 2 |
Margins of ultimate lamina segments entire | 9 | |
2 | Margins of ultimate lamina segments bearing branched hairs | lyallii |
Margins of ultimate lamina segments lacking hairs | 3 | |
3 | Laminae undivided or forked or 1-pinnatifid, usually <20 mm long (range 3–28 mm) | 4 |
Laminae at least 2-pinnatifid, usually >20 mm long (range 7–280 mm) | 5 | |
4 | Sori stalked, terminating rachises; indusial flaps toothed, spiny on the outer surfaces | minimum |
Sori lacking stalks, terminating lamina segments; indusial flaps entire, lacking spines | armstrongii | |
5 | Laminae 7–120 mm long, 5–30 mm wide, 1–3-pinnatifid, more or less flat; 1–3 sori on each primary pinna | 6 |
Laminae 10–280 mm long, 7–165 mm wide, usually 4–5-pinnatifid (rarely 3-pinnatifid), often with the margins curved downwards; 1–several sori on each primary pinna | 8 | |
6 | Rachises winged only in distal half; indusial flaps deeply toothed | revolutum |
Rachises winged throughout; indusial flaps entire or only slightly toothed | 7 | |
7 | Secondary pinnae arising on both sides of primary pinnae; 1 sorus on each primary pinna; indusial flaps slightly toothed | cupressiforme |
Secondary pinnae arising only on acroscopic side of primary pinnae; 1–3 sori on each primary pinna; indusial flaps entire | peltatum | |
8 | Sori occurring only close to the rachis, bent up at 90º to plane of frond; indusial flaps fused for half their length into a tube; receptacles usually exserted (up to 6 mm); rachis wings toothed | multifidum |
Sori occurring throughout the length of the pinna, not bent upwards; indusial flaps free almost to base; receptacles not or rarely exserted; rachis wings entire or very shallowly toothed | bivalve | |
9 | Rhizomes, stipes and/or laminae distinctly hairy | 10 |
Rhizomes, stipes and laminae glabrous, or bearing only very scattered hairs | 17 | |
10 | Hairs more or less absent from lamina surfaces | 11 |
Hairs present on lamina surfaces | 13 | |
11 | Indusial flaps with distinct crests on their outer surfaces; fronds strongly aromatic, staining paper yellow or brown when dried | sanguinolentum |
Indusial flaps lacking crests; fronds rarely aromatic, or staining paper when dried | 12 | |
12 | Stiff bristly hairs densely covering stipe and lower rachis; laminae olive-green; pinnae ovate, never flabellate | scabrum |
Tufts of long yellowish hairs on rhizomes, stipes and rachises; laminae yellow-green; pinnae often flabellate | flabellatum | |
13 | Lamina hairs mostly confined to margins; laminae flabellate, segments forking | lyallii |
Lamina hairs either absent from margins, or on surfaces and margins; laminae ovate, elliptic or triangular, 1–5-pinnatifid | 14 | |
14 | Lamina hairs stellately branched | 15 |
Lamina hairs unbranched, or only rarely branched | 16 | |
15 | Hairs grey on adaxial lamina surface, reddish brown on abaxial surface; ultimate lamina segments round in cross-section; ferns confined to Libocedrus or sometimes Metrosideros and Halocarpus trunks | malingii |
Hairs tawny or rusty-brown on both lamina surfaces; ultimate lamina segments flattened; common on tree fern and other trunks | frankliniae | |
16 | Laminae triangular, 8–55 mm long, usually shorter than stipes, 1–3-pinnatifid, densely covered in long, woolly hairs | rufescens |
Laminae ovate or elliptic, 20–200 mm long, longer than stipes, 3–5-pinnatifid, variably covered in short, slightly curled hairs | villosum | |
17 | Laminae undivided, reniform | nephrophyllum |
Laminae 1–5 pinnatifid, generally ovate or elliptic, never reniform | 18 | |
18 | Stipes not winged, or only slightly winged distally | 19 |
Stipes winged for at least half their length, sometimes very narrowly | 20 | |
19 | Laminae 2–3-pinnatifid, 10–200 mm long, 8–40 mm wide; sori sunk in apices of ultimate lamina segments, solitary | rarum |
Laminae 3–5-pinnatifid, 45–270 mm long, 22–160 mm wide; sori free on apices of short ultimate segments, often paired | demissum | |
20 | Rhizomes erect or short-creeping | pulcherrimum |
Rhizomes long-creeping | 21 | |
21 | Wings on stipe and rachis flexuous throughout | flexuosum |
Wings on stipe and rachis planate, or only slightly or partly flexuose | 22 | |
22 | Indusial flaps with distinct crests on their outer surfaces; fronds strongly aromatic, staining paper yellow or brown when dried | sanguinolentum |
Indusial flaps lacking crests; fronds rarely aromatic, or staining paper when dried | 23 | |
23 | Sori partially immersed in lamina segments; indusial flaps elliptic, orbicular or obovate | 24 |
Sori adnate to lamina segments; indusial flaps usually triangular or ovate, rarely elliptic or orbicular | 25 | |
24 | Ultimate lamina segments 0.8–1.2 mm wide, apices obtuse, truncate or emarginate; indusial flaps elliptic to obovate; plants confined to Raoul Island | polyanthos |
Ultimate lamina segments 1.3–2.5 mm wide, apices acute or obtuse but never emarginate; indusial flaps elliptic to orbicular; plants widespread | dilatatum | |
25 | Laminae 4–5-pinnatifid; lamina segments divaricate, not curved towards frond apex; apices of segments rounded or shallowly emarginate; stipe usually only winged in distal half | pluviatile |
Laminae 2–4-pinnatifid; lamina segments in distal half curved towards frond apex; apices of segments usually strongly emarginate; stipe winged for most of its length | australe |
Hymenophyllum is characterised morphologically by its bivalvate indusia and receptacles that are usually included within the valves. However, three New Zealand species, H. minimum, H. multifidum and H. nephrophyllum, often have receptacles that are exserted for a short distance beyond the indusium, and in several other species the receptacles are occasionally slightly exserted. In H. nephrophyllum the indusia are also urceolate. The rhizomes in species of Hymenophyllum are generally almost glabrous or bear only scattered hairs near the stipe bases, in contrast to those in Trichomanes which are abundantly covered in red-brown hairs.
Most New Zealand species of Hymenophyllum have lamina segments that are a single cell thick, except for the costae. A few species have a differentiated margin which may be more than one cell thick, and three species, H. dilatatum, H. nephrophyllum and H. scabrum, have laminae that are 2–4 cells thick throughout. However, these characters are not especially useful in identification of individual species.
Distributed throughout the tropics and south temperate regions, with a few species extending also into north temperate regions. Nine of the ten subgenera of Hymenophyllum recognised by Ebihara et al. (2006) occur in the Pacific region, and 63 of c. 330 species are represented there. All of those nine subgenera also occur in New Zealand. Diploophyllum and Cardiomanes are endemic to New Zealand, and the region is probably the centre of diversity of subgenus Pleuromanes (Ebihara et al. 2010). 24 species in New Zealand; 14 endemic.
Category | Number |
---|---|
Indigenous (Endemic) | 14 |
Indigenous (Non-endemic) | 10 |
Total | 24 |
Base chromosome numbers of x = 11 to 36 are recorded for Hymenophyllum (Ebihara et al. 2006).
The following species were excluded from the New Zealand flora by Brownsey et al. (1985): Hymenophyllum ciliatum (Sw.) Sw., Hymenophyllum emarginatum Sw., Hymenophyllum secundum Hook. et Grev. and Hymenophyllum tortuosum Hook. & Grev.