Fern
Translation- Fern
Taxobox
name = Ferns (Pteridophyta)
fossil_range = MidDevonian ["Wattieza ", Stein, W. E., F. Mannolini, L. V. Hernick, E. Landling, and C. M. Berry. 2007. [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v446/n7138/abs/nature05705.html "Giant cladoxylopsid trees resolve the enigma of the Earth's earliest forest stumps at Gilboa"] , "Nature" (19 April 2007) 446:904-907.] - Recent

image_width = 240px
image_caption = "Athyrium filix-femina " unrolling young frond
regnum =Plant ae
divisio = Pteridophyta
subdivision_ranks = Classescite journal
author = Smith, A.R.
coauthors = Pryer, K.M.; Schuettpelz, E.; Korall, P.; Schneider, H.; Wolf, P.G.
year = 2006
title = A classification for extant ferns
journal = Taxon
volume = 55
issue = 3
pages = 705–731
url = http://www.pryerlab.net/publication/fichier749.pdf
accessdate = 2008-02-12
doi = 10.1093/molbev/msm267.
doi_brokendate = 2008-06-26]
subdivision =
*†Cladoxylopsida
*Psilotopsida
*Equisetopsida ("alias" Sphenopsida)
*Marattiopsida
*Polypodiopsida ("alias" Pteridopsida, Filicopsida)A fern is any one of a group of about 20,000
species ofplant s classified in the phylum or division Pteridophyta, also known as Filicophyta. The group is also referred to as Polypodiophyta, or Polypodiopsida when treated as a subdivision oftracheophyta (vascular plants). The study of ferns and other pteridophytes is called pteridology, and one who studies ferns and other pteridophytes is called a pteridologist. The term "pteridophyte " has traditionally been used to describe all seedlessvascular plant s, making it synonymous with "ferns andfern allies ". This can be confusing since members of the fern phylum Pteridophyta are also sometimes referred to as pteridophytes.Life cycle
Ferns are
vascular plant s differing from the more primitivelycophyte s by having true leaves (megaphylls), and they differ fromseed plant s (gymnosperm s andangiosperm s) in their mode of reproduction - lacking flowers andseed s. Like all other vascular plants, they have a life cycle referred to asalternation of generations , characterized by adiploid sporophytic and ahaploid gametophytic phase. Unlike the gymnosperms and angiosperms, the ferns' gametophyte is a free-living organism. The life cycle of a typical fern is as follows:# A
sporophyte (diploid ) phase produceshaploid spore s bymeiosis ;
# A spore grows by mitosis into agametophyte , which typically consists of a photosyntheticprothallus
# The gametophyte producesgametes (often bothsperm and eggs on the same prothallus) bymitosis
# A mobile, flagellate sperm fertilizes an egg that remains attached to the prothallus
# The fertilized egg is now a diploidzygote and grows by mitosis into a sporophyte (the typical "fern" plant).Fern ecology
The stereotypic image of ferns growing in moist shady woodland nooks is far from being a complete picture of the habitats where ferns can be found growing. Fern species live in a wide variety of
habitat s, from remotemountain elevations, to drydesert rock faces, to bodies of water or in open fields. Ferns in general may be thought of as largely being specialists in marginal habitats, often succeeding in places where various environmental factors limit the success offlowering plant s. Some ferns are among the world's most serious weed species, including thebracken fern growing in the British highlands, or the mosquito fern ("Azolla ") growing in tropical lakes, both species form large aggressively spreading colonies. There are four particular types of habitats that ferns are found in: moist, shadyforest s; crevices in rock faces, especially when sheltered from the full sun; acid wetlands includingbog s andswamp s; and tropicaltree s, where many species areepiphyte s.Many ferns depend on associations with
mycorrhizal fungi. Many ferns only grow within specific pH ranges; for instance, the climbing fern ("Lygodium ") of easternNorth America will only grow in moist, intenselyacid soils, while the bulblet bladder fern ("Cystopteris bulbifera"), with an overlapping range, is only ever found onlimestone .Fern structure
Like the sporophytes of seed plants, those of ferns consist of:
* Stems: Most often an underground creepingrhizome , but sometimes an above-ground creepingstolon (e.g.,Polypodiaceae ), or an above-ground erect semi-woody trunk (e.g.,Cyatheaceae ) reaching up to 20 m in a few species (e.g., "Cyathea brownii" onNorfolk Island and "Cyathea medullaris" inNew Zealand ).
*Leaf : Thegreen , photosynthetic part of the plant. In ferns, it is often referred to as afrond , but this is because of the historical division between people who study ferns and people who study seed plants, rather than because of differences in structure. New leaves typically expand by the unrolling of a tight spiral called a crozier orfiddlehead . This uncurling of the leaf is termedcircinate vernation . Leaves are divided into three types:
** Trophophyll: A leaf that does not produce spores, instead only producing sugars by photosynthesis. Analogous to the typical green leaves of seed plants.
**Sporophyll : A leaf that produces spores. These leaves are analogous to the scales of pine cones or to stamens and pistil in gymnosperms and angiosperms, respectively. Unlike the seed plants, however, the sporophylls of ferns are typically not very specialized, looking similar to trophophylls and producing sugars by photosynthesis as the trophophylls do.
** Brophophyll: A leaf that produces abnormally large amounts of spores. Their leaves are also larger than the other leaves but bear a resemblance to trophopylls.
*Root s: The underground non-photosynthetic structures that take up water and nutrients fromsoil . They are always fibrous and are structurally very similar to the roots of seed plants.The gametophytes of ferns, however, are very different from those of seed plants. They typically consist of:
* Prothallus: A green, photosynthetic structure that is one cell thick, usually heart or kidney shaped, 3-10 mm long and 2-8 mm broad. The prothallus produces gametes by means of:
** Antheridia: Small spherical structures that produce flagellate sperm.
** Archegonia: A flask-shaped structure that produces a single egg at the bottom, reached by the sperm by swimming down the neck.
*Rhizoid s:root -like structures (not true roots) that consist of single greatly-elongated cells, water and mineral salts are absorbed over the whole structure. Rhizoids anchor the prothallus to the soil.One interesting difference between sporophytes and gametophytes might be summed up by the saying that "Nothing eats ferns, but everything eats gametophytes." This is an over-simplification, but it is true that gametophytes are often difficult to find in the field because they are far more likely to be food than are the sporophytes.
Evolution and classification
Ferns first appear in the fossil record in the early-
Carboniferous period. By theTriassic , the first evidence of ferns related to several modern families appeared. The "great fern radiation" occurred in the late-Cretaceous , when many modern families of ferns first appeared.Ferns have traditionally been grouped in the Class Filices, but modern classifications assign them their own division in the plant kingdom, called Pteridophyta.
Traditionally, three discrete groups of plants have been considered ferns: two groups of eusporangiate ferns--families
Ophioglossaceae (adders-tongues,moonwort s, andgrape-fern s) andMarattiaceae --and the leptosporangiate ferns. The Marattiaceae are a primitive group of tropical ferns with a large, fleshy rhizome, and are now thought to be a sibling taxon to the main group of ferns, the leptosporangiate ferns. Several other groups of plants were considered "fern allies": theclubmoss es,spikemoss es, and quillworts in theLycopodiophyta , thewhisk fern s inPsilotaceae , and thehorsetail s in theEquisetaceae . More recent genetic studies have shown that the Lycopodiophyta are only distantly related to any othervascular plant s, having radiated evolutionarily at the base of the vascular plantclade , while both the whisk ferns and horsetails are as much "true" ferns as are the Ophioglossoids and Marattiaceae. In fact, the whisk ferns and Ophioglossoids are demonstrably a clade, and the horsetails and Marattiaceae are arguably another clade. Molecular data - which remain poorly constrained for many parts of the plants' phylogeny - have been supplemented by recent morphological observations supporting the inclusion of "Equisetaceae" within the ferns, notably relating to the construction of their sperm, and peculiarities of their roots (Smith "et al" 2006, and references therein).One possible means of treating this situation is to consider only the leptosporangiate ferns as "true" ferns, while considering the other three groups as "fern allies". In practice, numerous classification schemes have been proposed for ferns and fern allies, and there has been little consensus among them. A new classification by Smith et al. (2006) is based on recent molecular systematic studies, in addition to morphological data. This classification divides ferns into four classes:
*Psilotopsida
*Equisetopsida
*Marattiopsida
*PolypodiopsidaThe last group includes most plants familiarly known as ferns. Modern research supports older ideas based on morphology that the Osmundaceae diverged early in the evolutionary history of the leptosporangiate ferns; in certain ways this family is intermediate between the eusporangiate ferns and the leptosporangiate ferns.
The complete classification scheme proposed by Smith et al. (2006; alternative names in brackets):
*Class
Psilotopsida
**OrderOphioglossales
***FamilyOphioglossaceae (incl.Botrychiaceae ,Helminthostachyaceae )
**OrderPsilotales
***FamilyPsilotaceae (incl.Tmesipteridaceae )
*ClassEquisetopsida [=Sphenopsida]
**OrderEquisetales
***FamilyEquisetaceae
*ClassMarattiopsida
**OrderMarattiales
***FamilyMarattiaceae (incl.Angiopteridaceae ,Christenseniaceae ,Danaeaceae ,Kaulfussiaceae )
*ClassPteridopsida [=Filicopsida, Polypodiopsida]
**OrderOsmundales
***FamilyOsmundaceae
**OrderHymenophyllales
***FamilyHymenophyllaceae (incl.Trichomanaceae )
**OrderGleicheniales
***FamilyGleicheniaceae (incl.Dicranopteridaceae ,Stromatopteridaceae )
***FamilyDipteridaceae (incl.Cheiropleuriaceae )
***FamilyMatoniaceae
**OrderSchizaeales
***FamilyLygodiaceae
***FamilyAnemiaceae (incl.Mohriaceae )
***FamilySchizaeaceae
**OrderSalviniales
***FamilyMarsileaceae (incl.Pilulariaceae )
***FamilySalviniaceae (incl.Azollaceae )
**OrderCyatheales
***FamilyThyrsopteridaceae
***FamilyLoxomataceae
***FamilyCulcitaceae
***FamilyPlagiogyriaceae
***FamilyCibotiaceae
***FamilyCyatheaceae (incl.Alsophilaceae ,Hymenophyllopsidaceae )
***FamilyDicksoniaceae (incl.Lophosoriaceae )
***FamilyMetaxyaceae
**OrderPolypodiales
***FamilyLindsaeaceae (incl.Cystodiaceae ,Lonchitidaceae )
***FamilySaccolomataceae
***FamilyDennstaedtiaceae (incl.Hypolepidaceae ,Monachosoraceae ,Pteridiaceae )
***FamilyPteridaceae (incl.Acrostichaceae ,Actiniopteridaceae ,Adiantaceae ,Anopteraceae ,Antrophyaceae ,Ceratopteridaceae ,Cheilanthaceae ,Cryptogrammaceae ,Hemionitidaceae ,Negripteridaceae ,Parkeriaceae ,Platyzomataceae ,Sinopteridaceae ,Taenitidaceae ,Vittariaceae )
***FamilyAspleniaceae
***FamilyThelypteridaceae
***FamilyWoodsiaceae (incl.Athyriaceae ,Cystopteridaceae )
***FamilyBlechnaceae (incl.Stenochlaenaceae )
***FamilyOnocleaceae
***FamilyDryopteridaceae (incl.Aspidiaceae ,Bolbitidaceae ,Elaphoglossaceae ,Hypodematiaceae ,Peranemataceae )
***FamilyOleandraceae
***FamilyDavalliaceae
***FamilyPolypodiaceae (incl.Drynariaceae ,Grammitidaceae ,Gymnogrammitidaceae ,Loxogrammaceae ,Platyceriaceae ,Pleurisoriopsidaceae )Economic uses
Ferns are not as important economically as seed plants but have considerable importance. Some ferns are used for food, including the fiddleheads of
bracken , "Pteridium aquilinum",ostrich fern , "Matteuccia struthiopteris", andcinnamon fern , "Osmunda cinnamomea] ". "Diplazium esculentum " is also used by some tropical peoples as food.Ferns of the genus "Azolla" are very small, floating plants that do not look like ferns. Called
mosquito fern , they are used as a biological fertilizer in the rice paddies of southeast Asia, taking advantage of their ability to fix nitrogen from the air into compounds that can then be used by other plants.A great many ferns are grown in
horticulture as landscape plants, for cut foliage and ashouseplant s, especially theBoston fern ("Nephrolepis exaltata"). TheBird's Nest Fern , "Asplenium nidus", is also popular, and thestaghorn fern s, genus "Platycerium", have a considerable following.Several ferns are noxious
weed s orinvasive species , including Japanese climbing fern ("Lygodium japonicum"), mosquito fern andsensitive fern ("Onoclea sensibilis"). Giant water fern ("Salvinia molesta ") is one of the world's worst aquatic weeds. The important fossil fuelcoal consists of the remains of primitive plants, including ferns.Ferns have been studied and found to be useful in the removal of heavy metals, especially arsenic, from the soil [ [http://www.sciencedaily.com/videos/2005/0804-danger_in_your_backyard.htm Danger in Your Backyard - Soil Chemists Plant Ferns to Soak Up Backyard Poisons ] ]
Other ferns with some economic significance include:
*"Dryopteris filix-mas " (male fern), used as avermifuge , and formerly in theUS Pharmacopeia ; also, this fern accidentally sprouting in a bottle resulted in Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward's 1829 invention of the terrarium orWardian case
*"Rumohra adiantoides " (floral fern), extensively used in the florist trade
*"Osmunda regalis" (royal fern) and "Osmunda cinnamomea" (cinnamon fern), the root fiber being used horticulturally; the fiddleheads of "O. cinnamomea" are also used as a cooked vegetable
*"Matteuccia struthiopteris " (ostrich fern), the fiddleheads used as a cooked vegetable in North America
*"Pteridium aquilinum " (bracken), the fiddleheads used as a cooked vegetable in Japan and are believed to be responsible for the high rate of stomach cancer in Japan. It is also one of the world's most important agricultural weeds, especially in the British highlands, and often poisons cattle and horses.
*"Diplazium esculentum " (vegetable fern), a source of food for some native societies
*"Pteris vittata" (brake fern), used to absorbarsenic from the soil
*"Polypodium glycyrrhiza" (licorice fern), roots chewed for their pleasant flavor
*Tree fern s, used as building material in some tropical areas
*"Cyathea cooperi " (Australian tree fern), an important invasive species in Hawaii
*"Ceratopteris" "richardii", a model plant for teaching and research, often called C-fernCultural connotations
In
Slavic folklore , ferns are believed to bloom once a year, during the Ivan Kupala night. Although it's exceedingly difficult to find, anyone who takes a look of afern flower will be happy and rich for the rest of his life. Similarly inFinland , the tradition holds that one who finds theseed of a fern in bloom onMidsummer night, will by the possession of it be able to travel under a glamour of invisibility and shall be guided to the locations where eternally blazingWill o' the wisp s mark the spot of hiddentreasure caches [http://www.saunalahti.fi/~marian1/gourmet/season5a.htm] ."
Pteridomania "' is a term for theVictorian era craze of ferncollecting and fern motifs indecorative art includingpottery ,glass ,metal s,textile s,wood , printed paper, andsculpture "appearing on everything fromchristening presents togravestone s and memorials." The fashion for growing ferns indoors led to the development of theWardian case , a glazed cabinet that would exclude air pollutants and maintain the necessary humidity. [ [http://www.peterboyd.com/pteridomania.htm Peter D. A. Boyd's Pteridomania] ]The dried form of ferns was also used in other arts, being used as a stencil or directly inked for use in a design. The botanical work, "
The Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland ", is a notable example of this type ofnature printing . The process, patented by the artist and publisher Henry Bradbury, impressed a specimen on to a soft lead plate. The first publication to demonstrate this wasAlois Auer 's "The Discovery of the Nature Printing-Process".Medicinal Value
Ferns are sometimes used in medicine to treat cuts and clean them out. Ferns are also good bandages if you are stuck out in the wild. [http://www.paghat.com/deerfern.html] Rubbing a sword fern frond spore-side-down on a stinging nettle sting removes the stinging. [http://www.answers.com/topic/sword-fern]
Misunderstood names
Several non-fern plants are called "ferns" and are sometimes confused with true ferns. These include:
*"Asparagus fern" - This may apply to one of several species of the monocot genus "Asparagus ", which are flowering plants.
*"Sweetfern" - A flowering shrub of the genus "Comptonia ".
*"Air fern " - A group ofanimal s calledhydrozoa n that are distantly related tojellyfish andcoral s. They are harvested, dried, dyed green, and then sold as a "plant" that can "live on air". While it may look like a fern, it is merely the skeleton of this colonial animal.
*"Fern bush" - "Chamaebatiaria millefolium" - a rose family shrub with fern-like leaves.In addition, the book "
Where the Red Fern Grows " has elicited many questions about the mythical "red fern" named in the book. There is no such known plant, although there has been speculation that the oblique grape-fern, "Sceptridium dissectum", could be referred to here, because it is known to appear on disturbed sites and its fronds may redden over the winter.Gallery
ee also
*
Fern spike
*Pteridomania
*Fiddlehead greens References
* Pryer, Kathleen M., Harald Schneider, Alan R. Smith, Raymond Cranfill, Paul G. Wolf, Jeffrey S. Hunt and Sedonia D. Sipes. 2001. Horsetails and ferns are a monophyletic group and the closest living relatives to seed plants. "Nature" 409: 618-622 (abstract [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v409/n6820/abs/409618a0.html here] ).
* Pryer, Kathleen M., Eric Schuettpelz, Paul G. Wolf, Harald Schneider, Alan R. Smith and Raymond Cranfill. 2004. Phylogeny and evolution of ferns (monilophytes) with a focus on the early leptosporangiate divergences. "American Journal of Botany" 91:1582-1598 (online abstract [http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/abstract/91/10/1582 here] ).
* Moran, Robbin C. (2004). "A Natural History of Ferns". Portland, OR: Timber Press. ISBN 0-88192-667-1.
* Lord, Thomas R. (2006). "Ferns and Fern Allies of Pennsylvania". Indiana, PA: Pinelands Press. [http://www.paferns.com]
* Smith, A. R., K. M. Pryer, E. Schuettpelz, P. Korall, H. Schneider & P. G. Wolf. 2006. A classification for extant ferns. "Taxon" 55(3):705–731. [http://www.pryerlab.net/publication/fichier749.pdf online available]
*cite paper | first = Peter D. A. | last = Boyd | authorlink = | title = Pteridomania - the Victorian passion for ferns | version = Revised: web version | publisher = Antique Collecting 28, 6, 9-12. | date = 2002-01-02 | url = http://www.peterboyd.com/pteridomania.htm | format = | id = | accessdate = 2007-10-02External links
* [http://tolweb.org/tree?group=Filicopsida&contgroup=Embryophytes Tree of Life Web Project: Filicopsida]
* A classification of the [http://www.anbg.gov.au/fern/taxa/classification.html ferns and their allies]
* [http://www.jaknouse.athens.oh.us/ferns/bookfern.html A fern book bibliography]
* [http://www1.akira.ne.jp/~unzen/pteridophyta.html Register of fossil Pteridophyta]
* [http://delta-intkey.com/britfe/ L. Watson and M.J. Dallwitz (2004 onwards). The Ferns (Filicopsida) of the British Isles.]
* [http://www.peterboyd.com/pteridomania2.htm Ferns and Pteridomania in Victorian Scotland]
* [http://www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/pages/non-seed-plants.htm Non-seed plant images at bioimages.vanderbilt.edu]
* [http://www.birdock.com/read/ferns_in_detail/ "Ferns in detail"] , an online book
* [http://www.amerfernsoc.org/ "American Fern Society"]
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Look at other dictionaries:
Fern — (f[ e]rn), n. [AS. fearn; akin to D. varen, G. farn, farnkraut; cf. Skr. par[.n]a wing, feather, leaf, sort of plant, or Lith. papartis fern.] (Bot.) An order of cryptogamous plants, the {Filices}, which have their fructification on the back of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fern — fern, I) Adj., s. entfernt. – II) Adv.procul (dem Blick entlegen, fern, von dem, was den jedesmaligen Verhältnissen u. Umständen nach als fern von etwas erscheint, u. zwar = aus der Ferne [von fern, fernher], in der Ferne, in die Ferne, fernhin… … Kleines deutsch-lateinisches Handwörterbuch
Fern — Fern, adv. Long ago. [Obs.] Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fern — Fern, a. [AS. fyrn.] Ancient; old. [Obs.] Pilgrimages to . . . ferne halwes. [saints]. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Äfern — * Äfern, oder Äffern, ein im Hochdeutschen längst veraltetes Verbum, welches aber noch Sprüchw. 17, 9. vorkommt: wer eine Sache äfert, macht Fürsten uneins, wo die meisten Herausgeber aus Unwissenheit der wahren Bedeutung eifern daraus gemacht… … Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der Hochdeutschen Mundart
fern — noun bot. папоротник (мужской) … Англо-русский словарь Мюллера
fern — 1> бот. высшее споровое растение 2> папоротник (Filicales) … Новый большой англо-русский словарь
Fern — Fern, Insel, so v.w. Farn Island … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Fern — (Fernpaß), 1204 m hoher Paß, der die Nardtiroler Kalkalpen gegen die Algäuer Alpen begrenzt und die Wasserscheide zwischen Inn und Loisach (Isar) bildet, mit fünf kleinen Seen (in einem das ehemalige Jagdschloß Siegmundsburg) und dem alten Schloß … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Fern — Fern, Fernpaß, Paß im nördl. Tirol, vom Lechtal (Reutte) zum Inntal (Telfs), 60 km lang … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
fern — fernless, adj. fernlike, adj. /ferrn/, n. any seedless, nonflowering vascular plant of the class Filicinae, of tropical to temperate regions, characterized by true roots produced from a rhizome, triangular fronds that uncoil upward and have a… … Universalium
Фильмы
- The Fern Orlyak., 1990 — Annotation: Residents of the village of Turochak are contemplating about their lives. The film provides a poetic image of Altai Territory
