2. STRUCTURE and FORM
approximately 11,000 known species
Vary in size from less than 1 cm in diameter to 25 meters
tall
Fern leaves are megaphylls that are commonly referred
to as fronds
4. STRUCTURE and FORM
Some are undivided, pleated or tongue-like, and others
resemble four-leaf clover or grow in such a way as to form
“nests”
Most abundant in wetter tropical and temperate habitats
but few are adapted to drier areas
5. STRUCTURE and FORM
Early leaves are lopsided because they grow faster on
their lower surface than their upper surface. This growth
pattern, which is called circinate vernation, produces
young leaves that are coiled into “fiddle heads.”
These croziers or “fiddle heads” the unroll and expand
revealing the blades.
Fern leaves are usually fertile but do not form strobili.
7. STRUCTURE and FORM
Sorus- dark spots on the lower surface of fern leaves which is
actually a collection of sporangia
These patches appear similar to fungal rusts
Sori of some species are covered by an outgrowth from the
leaf surface called indisium
Most modern ferns are homosporous (two orders of water
ferns and some extinct ferns are heterosporous).
9. A and B. Cross-section through a
leaflet of a true fern
1 = frond, 2 = vascular bundle, 3
= sorus, 4 = indusium (protective
scale), 5 = sporangia, 6 =
sporangium wall, 7 = spores
C. Detail of an entire spore
D. Detail of section through
spores.
E. Detail of the wall of a spore
10. STRUCTURE and FORM
The more primitive species have a protostele, most have
siphonosteles, and some have complex dictyosteles.
Stems, for the most part, are rhizomes that grow at, or
just under, the ground surface.
Roots are simple, uncomplicated and arise adventitiously
along the rhizomes near the base of the fronds.
11. STRUCTURE and FORM
Ferns are divided into two groups based on the kind of
sporangium they possess. The more primitive are the
eusporangiate, and the more advanced the
leptosporangiate.
Eusporangia: These sporangia are thick‐walled and open
by splitting transversely. They produce thousands of
spores.
12. STRUCTURE and FORM
Leptosporangia: These thin‐walled, delicate sporangia
are only one or a few layers thick. They have an area,
the annulus, where cell walls are thickened. When the
annulus cells dry out at maturity, the sporangium splits
and, like a catapult, throws out the spores.
Spores are few—128 at most, but commonly 64.
13. REPRODUCTION
Sporophyte – is the conspicuous phase of the life cycle
Fern’s sporophyte consist of the fronds, a stem in the
form of a rhizome, and adventitious roots that arise along
the rhizome.
15. REPRODUCTION
At maturity, the blades are often divided into segments
called pinnae that are attached to a midrib or rachis.
A stalk or petiole is usually present at the base.
Sori appear on the lower surfaces of blades of a mature
fronds.
16. REPRODUCTION
o These patches are actually clusters of sporangia.
oThese are mostly found in numerous, discrete clusters
called sori (singular:sorus)
oThe sori are protected by thin, individual flaps of colorless
tissue called indusia (singular:indusium)
oThis indisium often resembles a tiny, semi-transparent
umbrella attached to its base to the frond surface
17. REPRODUCTION
oAs sporangia mature, the indisium, resembles shrivels and
exposes the sporangia beneath.
Most sporangia have a conspicuous row of heavy-walled
brownish cells along the edge. This row of cells is called
annulus which looks like a tiny millipede.
Annulus functions in catapulting spores out of the
sporangium.
18. REPRODUCTION
Annulus functions in catapulting spores out of the
sporangium.
Sporocytes undergo meiosis in the sporangia producing
either 48 or 64 spores per sporangium
After the spores have been flung out of their sporangia,
they are dispersed by the wind
19. REPRODUCTION
Shady, wet ledges and rock crevices or moist soil are
habitats usually suitable for their survival
Those that germinate in favorable locations produce little
“Irish valentines” or prothalli as the green, heart-shaped
gametophytes of ferns and other seedless vascular plants
Prothalli are only one cell thick except the middle which
is slightly thicker
20. 1 = young prothallium, 2 = rest of the spore wall, 3 = chloroplasts, 4 = rhizoids
21. REPRODUCTION
Antheridia are interspersed among the rhizoids produced
on the lower surface of the central area with archegonia
are also being produced, usually closer to the notch of the
heart-shaped gametophyte.
Archegonia – flask-shaped with curving necks that
protrude slightly above the surface
22. A - D. Prothallium with
antheridia.
Zoom view of antheria
and sperms.
A and B. 1 = antheridia,
2 = sperms in the
antheridia
C. Detail of sperms
(with flagella)
D. Detail of antheridia
filled up with sperms
23. A - D. Prothallium with archegonia
Zoom view of prothallium, archegonia
and egg cell
A. Prothallium with archegonia
B. Detail of archegonium in a cross-
section (zoom of archegoniuma, egg
cell)
C. Detail of archegonia in upperview
D. Detail of prothallium cells
(photosynthetic active due to
chloroplasts)
1 = prothallium, 2 = prothallium cells, 3
= rhizoids, 4 = archegonia, 5 = egg cell, 6
= neck canal cells, 7 = neck canal, 8 =
chloroplasts inside prothallium cells, 9 =
cell nucleus
26. FAMILY: Schizaeaceae
leaves more or less grasslike, with a long petiole and a
linear or fan-shaped blade
veins dichotomously branching
sporangia dense on specialized slender lobes of the
ultimate segments
mostly tropical
28. FAMILY: Schizaeaceae
GENUS: Schizaea
Common names: curly grass and comb fern
Some species are very small and inconspicuous, and so
may often be overlooked in nature
The genus is distinctive and not at all like the common
conception of a fern
30. FAMILY: Schizaeaceae
GENUS: Actinostachys
small genus of small ferns originally included in the genus
Schizaea
was segregated on the basis of the flabelliform (fan-
shaped) laminae
colloquially called the ray ferns.
32. FAMILY: Thelypteridaceae
plants in soil or, less commonly, on rocks
rhizomes short- to long-creeping or erect, scaly
leaves mostly one or two times pinnately divided, rarely
highly divided, most commonly with slender needlelike
hairs
sori round or elongate along the veins, the indusia absent
or kidney-shaped
34. FAMILY: Thelypteridaceae
GENUS: Thelypteris
“maiden ferns”
terrestrial, with the exception of a few which are
lithophytes (grow on rocks)
hese ferns are tropical, although there are a number of
temperate species
38. FAMILY: Dicksoniaceae
tree fern family
stems mostly erect and trunklike (up to 10 m or 33 ft.) or,
less commonly, smaller, hairy near the tip and usually
with a mantle of roots
leaves, which are often highly divided (up to 3.5 m. or
11.5 ft.)
40. FAMILY: Dicksoniaceae
GENUS: Dicksonia
regarded as related to Cyathea, but is considered more
primitive
fossil record includes stems, pinnules, and spores.
An easily cultivated species of Dicksonia is D. antarctica,
the soft tree fern
42. FAMILY: Hymenophyllaceae
“filmy ferns” and “bristle ferns”
often appear as very dark green or even black clumps
and may be mistaken for a robust moss or liverworts
mostly rainforest epiphytes
spores globose, green
gametophyte ribbon-shaped or filamentous
44. FAMILY: Hymenophyllaceae
GENUS: Hymenophyllum
its name means "membranous leaf", referring to the very
thin translucent tissue of the fronds
leaves are generally only one cell thick and lack stomata,
making them vulnerable to desiccation
found only in very humid areas, such as in moist forests
and among sheltered rocks
49. FAMILY: Blechnaceae
plants in soil or on rocks, less commonly epiphytic, rarely
climbing
rhizomes short- to long-creeping or erect (occasionally
trunklike), scaly
leaves one time pinnately compound or lobed
distributed nearly worldwide but most diverse in tropical
regions
51. FAMILY: Blechnaceae
GENUS: Blechnum
“hard fern”
greatest species diversity is in tropical regions
most are herbaceous plants, but a few species are tree
ferns with stems up to 3 m tall
varies from most ferns in having a separation of sterile
(photosynthetic) and fertile (reproductive) fronds in the
same plant.
53. FAMILY: Cyatheacea
scaly tree fern family
stems erect and mostly trunklike (up to 25 m. or 82 ft.)
scaly near the tip (sometimes also hairy) and usually with
a mantle of roots
leaves mostly large (up to 5 m. or about 16 ft.), one to
four times pinnately compound
55. FAMILY: Cyatheacea
GENUS: Cyathea
terrestrial ferns, usually with a single tall stem
rarely, the trunk may be branched or creeping
many species also develop a fibrous mass of roots at the
base of the trunk
habitats ranging from tropical rain forests to temperate
woodlands
57. FAMILY: Aspleniaceae
“spleenworts”
plants in soil, on rocks, or epiphytic
rhizomes short- to long-creeping or erect, usually scaly,
the scales usually clathrate (the cells with dark adjoining
walls and clear lateral walls)
the spores are mostly bean-shaped (bilateral)
60. FAMILY: Dennstaedtiaceae
“cup ferns” and “bracken”
mostly in soil, occasionally climbing
rhizomes mostly very long-creeping (to more than 100 m.
or 330 ft.), in Pteridium), hairy
leaves two to four times pinnately compound, glabrous
or hairy
66. FAMILY: Salviniaceae
GENUS: Salvinia
“watermoss”
small, floating aquatics with creeping stems, branched,
bearing hairs on the leaf surface papillae but no true
roots
leaves are in trimerous whorls, with two leaves green,
sessile or short-petioled, flat, entire, and floating, and one
leaf finely dissected, petiolate, rootlike, and pendent
69. FAMILY: Salviniaceae
GENUS: Azolla
“mosquito fern, duckweed fern, fairy moss”
extremely reduced in form and specialized, looking
nothing like other typical ferns but more
resembling duckweed or some mosses
71. FAMILY: Marsileaceae
"pepperwort family" or "water-clover family"
heterosporous
aquatic and semi-aquatic ferns, though at first sight they
do not physically resemble other ferns
73. FAMILY: Marsileaceae
GENUS: Marsilea
aquatic ferns
unusual appearance and do not resemble common ferns
“water clover” or “four-leaf clover” because the long-
stalked leaves have four clover-like lobes and are either
held above water or submerged.
75. USES
some ferns species are edible, with crosiers being
considered delicacies
Other ferns are used medicinally
by contrast, Osmunda and Pteridium ferns are considered
to be carcinogenic (any substance or agent that tends to
produce a cancer)
76. USES
the aquatic mosquito fern (Azolla) hosts Anabaena
azollae, which converts nitrogen for use by plants such as
rice, enhancing production in rice paddies and other
fields
animals often root for fern rhizomes, which store
starches
77. USES
the braken fern Pteris vittata absorbs arsenic, a
carcinogenic heavy metal, from soil. By removing this
toxin, ferns can restore contaminated areas into viable
agricultural, industrial, and recreational sites.
ornamental garden plants and houseplants