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Home Home » TYPES » Ferns » Pellaea pteroides
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Pellaea pteroides

Pellaea pteroides
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  • Cheilanthes hirta
  • Cheilanthes hirta lush in a moist setting
  • Cheilanthes hirta on rocks
  • Elaphoglossum acrostichoides
  • Fern leaf
  • Ferns in habitat
  • Gleichenia polypodioides
  • Gleichenia polypodioides fronds
  • Pellaea pteroides
  • Pellaea pteroides similar frond segments
  • Pellaea pteroides some dissimilar frond segments
  • Polystichum incongruum
  • Pteridium aquilinum
  • Ptisana fraxinea
  • Ptisana fraxinea, a frond
  • Rumohra adiantiformis
  • Rumohra adiantiformis frond details

Image information

Description

Pellaea pteroides, commonly known as the myrtle fern, is a small, perennial fern growing from a short, creeping rhizome to heights around 40 cm, often shorter.

The Pellaea ferns form part of the Cheilanthoideae subfamily of the Pteridaceae family. They are commonly known as cliffbrakes found in Africa, the Americas, Australia and New Zealand.

The species distribution of this South African endemic is in the Western Cape from the Cape Peninsula northwards to Clanwilliam and eastwards to Ladismith in the west of the Little Karoo. The photo was taken in Jonkershoek.

The habitat is fynbos, forests, succulent Karoo, in both full sun and secluded places on rocky slopes and moist kloofs. The species is not considered to be threatened in its habitat early in the twenty first century (iNaturalist; Wikipedia; https://www.fernkloof.org.za; http://redlist.sanbi.org).

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23
Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
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