IX.—A Critical Examination of the Vittarieæ with a View to their Systematic Comparison
- 1 January 1927
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 55 (1) , 173-217
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0080456800016306
Abstract
The Vittarieæ, as described by Christensen, comprises five genera, viz. Vittaria, Monogramma, Antrophyum, Hecistopteris, and Anetium, all of which are epiphytic forms growing in the damp forests of the Old and New World Tropics. All of them possess creeping rhizomes on which the fronds are arranged more or less definitely in two rows on the dorsal surface. The fronds are simple in outline, with the exception of those of Hecistopteris which are dichotomously branched. The venation of the fronds is reticulate, except in Hecistopteris where there is an open, dichotomous system of veins, and in Monogramma, in some species of which the venation consists simply of a mid-rib. An interesting feature, which has proved to be valuable as a diagnostic character, is the presence of “spicule cells” in the epidermis of the fronds. These spicule cells are elongated cells containing spicules of silica, and their presence appears to be universal in the Vittarieæ. The sporangia are fairly constant in form through-out the group, but their distribution is extremely varied. The roots are characteristically provided with very numerous reddish-brown root hairs, a character shared with other epiphytic Ferns. The Gametophyte is divergent from the common cordate type in all cases where it has been investigated. Such are the main external characteristics of the group under consideration.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- I.—Size, A Neglected Factor in Stelar MorphologyProceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1922
- A Revision of the Genus Vittaria J. E. Smith. I. The Species of the Subgenus RadiovittariaBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1914