FERN FAMILY 1041 



rolled into closed balls, finally dehiscent; veins free; sporangia dorsal on the 

 simple or forked veinlets. Damp places: Newf.— Fla.— Tex.— S.D. (Black Hills) 

 ■ — Sask . Plain — Suhmont . 



2. PTERETIS Raf, Ostrich Fern. 



_ Plants with coarse dimorphous fronds, growing in crowns from stoloniferous 

 rhizomes. Sterile fronds foHaceous. Fertile fronds contracted, with revohite 

 margins covering the sori. Sori roundish, on elevated cylindrical receptacles 

 partly covered by dehcate lacerate fugacious indusia inferiorly attached. [Stru- 

 thiopteris Mett., Malteuccia Todaro.] 



1. P, nodulosa (Michx.) Nieuwland. Scales of base of stipe pale brown to 

 cinnamon-colored, thin, membranous; fronds abruptly acuminate at apex, gradu- 

 ally reduced towards base; sterile fronds 0.6-3 m. long, broadly oblanceolate or 

 spatulate, with lanceolate or linear, pinnatifid pinnae 5-18 cm. long; segments 

 oblong, obtuse or acute; fertile fronds shorter, with rigid, upcurved, commonly 

 pinnatifid necklace-shaped pinnae; veins free, pinnate; veinlets simple. Onoclea 

 nodulosa Michx. Related to but distinct from the European P. struthiopteris 

 (L.) Nieuwland [Matleuccia struthiopleris (L.) Todaro.] Wet places: Newf.— 

 Va.— S.D.— B.C. MonL—SubmonL 



3. WOODSIA R. Br. 



Small plants with tufted pinnately compound fronds. Sori round, borne on 

 the veins. Indusia placed under the sporangia, sometimes enclosing it at first, 

 often variously divided. Veins free. 



Stipe articulate near the base. 1 w alabella 



Stipe not articulate. 



Blades pulverulent, with flattened articulate hairs and stalked glands. 



lilades without articulate hairs, unless at the ends of the indusia or segments, glabrous 



or minutely glandular. 

 Indusia very small, divided almost to the center into a few hair-like filaments. 



T J . 1 ^ ^. , , , . 3. PV. oregana. 



Indusia large, cleft more or less deeply mto several lobes. 



Lobes of the indusia divided at least halfway down into slender articulate 

 flattened hairs. 4. \y, mexicana 



Lobes of indusia merely jagged, rarely with an occasional jointed ' extension", 

 often glandular. 5. w, obtusa. 



1. W- glabella R. Br. Fronds tufted, 2.5-15.5 cm. long; stipes usually 

 straw-colored; blades linear or narrowly lanceolate, somewhat narrowed toward 

 base, smooth, pinnate; pinnae deltoid to roundish-ovate, crenately lobed; indusia 

 divided into narrow jointed hair-like curving divisions. Moist rocks: Alaska — 

 Greenl.— Que.— Alta.; N.H., N.Y.; ''Minn."; Eu. Boreal— SuharcUc. 



2. W. scopulina D. C. Eat. Fronds 5.5-35 cm. long; blades lanceolate, 

 pinnate; pinnae mostly oblong-ovate, deeply pinnatifid; segments short, ovate 

 or oblong, crenate-serrulate ; indusia delicate, deeply cleft into laciniae which, 

 terminate in short hairs. On rocks: B.C. — Neb. — Ariz. — Calif.; (Gas )e Penin- 



' (Great Craggy Mts.) N.C. : reported from Minn, and nw la. 



monL — MonL 



Sub- 



3- W. oregana D. C, Eat. Fronds 5-26.5 cm. long; blades lanceolate- 

 oblong, pinnate; pinnae triangular-oblong, obtuse or subacute, pinnatifid; seg- 

 ments oblong or ovate, obtuse, toothed or crenate; teeth of ten reflexed over the 

 sori; sori submarginal. On rocks: B.C.— Calif.— Ariz.— Colo.— (? S.D.)-^ask. 

 — Que. Suhmont. — Suhalp. 



4. W. mexicana Fee. Fronds 5-30 cm. long; blades lanceolate, pinnate, 

 minutely glandular; pinnae triangular-lanceolate or rarely suboblong, pinnately 

 divided; segments finely toothed, the teeth ending in delicate semitransparent 

 tips which are cihated in young fronds; sori submarginal. (?) W, Cathcartiana 

 B. L. Robins. Rocks: S.D. — Colo. — N.M. — ^Ariz.; Minn, and Mex. Son. — 



Mont. 



w 



innate to bipinnate, minutely glandular; pinnae 



37 



