- = Bernhardia Willd. ex Bernh., J. Bot. (Schrader) 1800(2): 132 (1801)
Epiphytic or terrestrial ferns. Rhizomes dichotomously branched, subterranean, bearing brown rhizoidal hairs. Aerial stems erect or pendulous, dichotomously branched, angular or complanate (not NZ), glabrous. Sterile leaves small, scale-like, spirally arranged, lacking veins. Synangia trilobed, rounded, arranged adaxially on bifid, scale-like sporophylls. Spores monolete, ellipsoidal, rugulate to smooth.
Psilotum is clearly distinguished from Tmesipteris by its highly reduced, scale-like leaves, and by the sporangia fused into trilobed synangia. At least 20 species and many varieties have been proposed (Reed 1966), but only two are accepted today (Chinnock 1998).
A genus of two species widely distributed in the tropics and subtropics. One species indigenous in New Zealand.
Category | Number |
---|---|
Indigenous (Non-endemic) | 1 |
Total | 1 |
Diploid to octoploid chromosome numbers of n = 52, 104 and c. 210 have been reported in specimens of Psilotum from different parts of the world, as well as possible triploid hybrids with 2n = c. 156 (see Brownsey & Lovis 1987).