Woodsia burgessiana Gerr. ex Hook & Baker
Synonyms |
Woodsia montividensis (Spreng.) Hieron var. var. burgessiana (Gerr. ex Hook. & Baker) Schelpe |
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Common name |
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Description |
Rhizome shortly creeping to prostrate, 5-10 mm in diameter; rhizome scales lanceolate in outline, margins pale, translucent, entire, 3-6 mm long, dark shiny brown. Fronds monomorphic, closely packed. Stipe 2-10 cm long, strawcoloured, more black towards the base, variably covered with minute hairlike scales, to glandular, to glabrous. Lamina deeply 2-pinnatifid to 2-pinnate, narrowly elliptic-oblong in outline, 6.5-60 x 2-6 cm; pinnules closely spaced, adnate to secondary rhachises, shortly rectangular in outline, apices rounded, margins deeply to irregularly crenate to serrate, both surfaces sparsely covered with minute, round, golden glands, either sessile or borne on long, flattened, translucent stalks, appearing as pale scales to the naked eye; rhachis sparsely glandular, sessile or stalked. Sori subcircular, up to 1 mm in diameter; indusium cup-shaped, completely enclosing the sporangia but splitting distally into 3-4 lobes folding back or falling of at maturity. |
Notes | The occurence of this species in Zimbabwe is based on herbarium specimens at SRGH under this name (Mapaura & Timberlake, 2004; Roux 2009). However other literature (Crouch et all., 2011; Burrows, 1990; Jacobsen, 1983) do not mention Zimbabwe as part of the distribution area. Herbarium specimens need to be checked and confirmed. |
Derivation | burgessiana: named after Miss Burgess of Birkenhead, Lancashire, we do not know why. |
Habitat | At high altitudes in montane grassland or alpine scrub, in shelter of boulders, often in boulder scree, or in rock crevices and ledges on cliff faces. |
Distribution worldwide | Lesotho, Madagascar, South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Distribution in Africa |
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Growth form |
Lithophytic, terrestrial. |
Literature |
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