Didymoglossum kapplerianum (J.W.Sturm) Ebihara & Dubuisson, Blumea

Kessler, Michael & Smith, Alan R., 2017, Prodromus of a fern flora for Bolivia. X. Hymenophyllaceae, Phytotaxa 328 (3), pp. 201-226 : 205

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.328.3.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1D5B787C-FFAC-265C-1D8B-82E2FD80F83E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Didymoglossum kapplerianum (J.W.Sturm) Ebihara & Dubuisson, Blumea
status

 

Didymoglossum kapplerianum (J.W.Sturm) Ebihara & Dubuisson, Blumea View in CoL 51: 236. 2006.

= Didymoglossum ekmanii (Wess.Boer) Ebihara & Dubuisson, Blumea View in CoL 51(2): 236. 2006.

= Microgonium kapplerianum (J.W.Sturm) Pic.Serm., Webbia View in CoL 31(1): 250. 1977.

= Trichomanes kapplerianum J.W.Sturm, Fl. Bras. View in CoL 1(2): 276. 1859.

= Trichomanes ekmanii Wess.Boer, Acta Bot. Neerl. View in CoL 11: 319, f. 33. 1962.

Range: —Antilles; Central America to Bolivia (BE, CO, LP, PA) and Brazil.

Ecology: —Uncommon; epiphytic and on wet rocks, in humid forests; to 500 m.

Notes: —Specimens with continuous (vs. interrupted) submarginal veins bordered on the outside by a row of cubical (vs. lengthened) cells have been separated as Didymoglossum ekmanii , but these differences do not seem to be a reliable distinction. In contrast with other Bolivian species, D. kapplerianum , in subg. Microgonium , has blades lacking marginal hairs but with distinct submarginal veins; the sori are wholly immersed, without lips and not dark-edged.

Lellinger (1991) attempted to distinguish D. kapplerianum (South America) from D. ekmanii (Antilles, Mesoamerica) , but we think them synonymous, as have some other investigators (e.g., Tryon & Stolze 1989). However, according to Ebihara et al. (2007) and Senterre et al. (2017), Colombian D. ekmanii and D. kapplerianum from Guadeloupe do not form a monophyletic cluster, hence contradicting the synonymization of the two species. Expanded molecular and morphological analyses of these and related taxa are needed, and in the interim we use the oldest available name for Bolivian populations.

Didymoglossum krausii (Hook. & Grev.) C.Presl View in CoL , Hymenophyllaceae (Presl) View in CoL 23. 1843 [ Abh. Königl. Böhm. Ges. Wiss., ser. 5, 3: 115. 1843].

= Trichomanes krausii Hook. & Grev., Icon. Filic. View in CoL 2: pl. 149. 1830.

Range: —Florida; Antilles; southern Mexico to Bolivia (BE, CO, LP, SC), Paraguay, and northern Argentina.

Ecology: —Common; epiphytic and on wet, mossy rocks, in humid forests; to 800(–1100) m.

Notes: —Variable in the degree of laminar dissection, the width of the segments, and the degree to which the sori are immersed. Most similar to D. reptans , from which it differs in having false veinlets mostly not connected, parallel and very close to the blade margins and sori immersed in the blade tissue. It also generally occurs at lower elevations, and the fronds are generally smaller.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Polypodiopsida

Order

Hymenophyllales

Family

Hymenophyllaceae

Genus

Didymoglossum

Loc

Didymoglossum kapplerianum (J.W.Sturm) Ebihara & Dubuisson, Blumea

Kessler, Michael & Smith, Alan R. 2017
2017
Loc

Didymoglossum krausii (Hook. & Grev.) C.Presl

Hook. & Grev. 1843: 115
1843
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