Christella dentata (Forssk.) Brownsey & Jermy
Synonyms |
Thelypteris dentata (Forssk.) E. P. St. John var. dentata |
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Common name |
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Description |
Rhizome shortly creeping, c. 7-10 mm in diameter; rhizome scales ovate to lanceolate in outline, margin entire, c. 5-8 mm long, dark brown, thinly pilose. Fronds monomorphic, closely spaced, arching, not proliferous, thinly herbaceous. Stipe 8-50 cm long, pale to greyish brown, minutely pubescent to subglabrous, with scales at the base. Lamina deeply 2-pinnatifid, narrowly elliptic to lanceolate in outline, apex tapering to a point with a deeply pinnatifid terminal segment, basal pinnae 1 or 2 pairs reduced, up to 1.6 × 0.54 m; pinnae narrowly lanceolate in outline, apex lobed and long tapering to a point, 4.5-21 x 1.5-2.5 cm; ultimate lobes oblong, slightly falcate, apex rounded, basal acroscopic lobe enlarged and sometimes overlapping the rhachis, 4-10 x 2.5-4.5 mm, sparsely hairy on both surfaces, more so along the costa and costules; rhachis thinly set with long hairs; veins 1 pair meeting below the sinus and sometimes a single vein joining in the sinus. Sori round, up to 20 per lobe; indusia small, hairy, up to 1 mm wide. |
Notes | Christella dentata resembles C. hispidula but the latter has one pair of veins meeting below the sinus (no additional single vein joining in the sinus) and an erect or inclining rhizome. C. buchananii has 2 or 3 pairs of gradually reducing pinnae, 2 or 3 pairs of veins meeting below the sinus.
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Derivation | dentata: toothed; referring to the lobed pinnae |
Habitat | Shady streambanks or low-altitude rivers in riverine forest, ditch-sides in swampy areas, valley bushland and thickets. |
Distribution worldwide | Africa, Yemen, Seychelles and Comoro Is., Madagascar, southern Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and introduced into tropical America. |
Distribution in Africa |
Angola, Benin, Burkina Fasso, Burundi, Cameroon, Dem. Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea (incl. Bioko), Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan and South Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania , Togo, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe. |
Growth form |
Terrestrial. |
Literature |
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