Edit History
OPHIOGLOSSUM sp. A. [family OPHIOGLOSSACEAE]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (2001) Author: J.E. Burrows, M.Sc. & R.J. Johns, M.Sc.
Names
OPHIOGLOSSUM sp. A. [family OPHIOGLOSSACEAE]
Information
Perennial herb with deciduous aerial parts. Rhizome fusiform, 10–15 mm long, 2–3 mm wide;roots numerous, descending, becoming horizontal, probably proliferous. Leaves 1 or 2; stipe 16–25 mm long, 30–40% of its length subterranean, stipe:lamina length ratio 0.7:1, stipe bases shortly persistent; lamina mid-green, held at ± 80° from the ground, elliptic, flat in sterile leaves, concave from above in fertile leaves, 25–50 mm long, 5–10 mm wide, length:width ratio ± 4.5:1, apex acute, apiculate, base narrowly cuneate; venation elongate throughout, with some secondary venation and included blind veinlets, median band lacking; epidermal cells elongate with wavy walls; stomata strongly aligned. Fertile spike 55–90 mm long, with 11–19 pairs of sporangia, fertile spike:lamina length ratio ± 2.5:1. Spores 40–45 µm in equatorial diameter, alete, muri broad, of uneven width and somewhat discontinuous, lumina reduced to narrow pits, granules lacking. Fig. 2/2 (p. 7).
Range
DISTR. U 2; K 4
Altitude range
800–1600 m
Distribution
UGANDA Kigezi District Queen Elizabeth Park, Ishasha Southern Circuit, 9 Dec. 1969, Lock 69/426! pro parteKENYA Kiambu District Ruiru, just S of Ruiru High School, 9 May 1971, Faden & Evans 71/391!
Distribution (external)
; Angola
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Botswana
Notes
This taxon closely resembles O. lancifolium C. Presl, the type of which is from Mauritius. However the type material is too scanty to define the species clearly and until either new topotypic material is collected, or spore samples from the type material can be examined by SEM, it is impossible in a genus as difficult as Ophioglossum to be certain that this taxon is synonymous with O. lancifolium. See also Burrows in Bothalia 23: 188 (1993).
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (2001) Author: J.E. Burrows, M.Sc. & R.J. Johns, M.Sc.
Names
OPHIOGLOSSUM sp. A. [family OPHIOGLOSSACEAE]
Information
Perennial herb with deciduous aerial parts. Rhizome fusiform, 10–15 mm long, 2–3 mm wide;roots numerous, descending, becoming horizontal, probably proliferous. Leaves 1 or 2; stipe 16–25 mm long, 30–40% of its length subterranean, stipe:lamina length ratio 0.7:1, stipe bases shortly persistent; lamina mid-green, held at ± 80° from the ground, elliptic, flat in sterile leaves, concave from above in fertile leaves, 25–50 mm long, 5–10 mm wide, length:width ratio ± 4.5:1, apex acute, apiculate, base narrowly cuneate; venation elongate throughout, with some secondary venation and included blind veinlets, median band lacking; epidermal cells elongate with wavy walls; stomata strongly aligned. Fertile spike 55–90 mm long, with 11–19 pairs of sporangia, fertile spike:lamina length ratio ± 2.5:1. Spores 40–45 µm in equatorial diameter, alete, muri broad, of uneven width and somewhat discontinuous, lumina reduced to narrow pits, granules lacking. Fig. 2/2 (p. 7).
Range
DISTR. U 2; K 4
Altitude range
800–1600 m
Distribution
UGANDA Kigezi District Queen Elizabeth Park, Ishasha Southern Circuit, 9 Dec. 1969, Lock 69/426! pro parteKENYA Kiambu District Ruiru, just S of Ruiru High School, 9 May 1971, Faden & Evans 71/391!
Distribution (external)
; Angola
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Botswana
Notes
This taxon closely resembles O. lancifolium C. Presl, the type of which is from Mauritius. However the type material is too scanty to define the species clearly and until either new topotypic material is collected, or spore samples from the type material can be examined by SEM, it is impossible in a genus as difficult as Ophioglossum to be certain that this taxon is synonymous with O. lancifolium. See also Burrows in Bothalia 23: 188 (1993).
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, page 1, (2001) Author: J.E. Burrows, M.Sc. & R.J. Johns, M.Sc.
Names
OPHIOGLOSSUM sp. A. [family OPHIOGLOSSACEAE]
Information
Perennial herb with deciduous aerial parts. Rhizome fusiform, 10–15 mm long, 2–3 mm wide;roots numerous, descending, becoming horizontal, probably proliferous. Leaves 1 or 2; stipe 16–25 mm long, 30–40% of its length subterranean, stipe:lamina length ratio 0.7:1, stipe bases shortly persistent; lamina mid-green, held at ± 80° from the ground, elliptic, flat in sterile leaves, concave from above in fertile leaves, 25–50 mm long, 5–10 mm wide, length:width ratio ± 4.5:1, apex acute, apiculate, base narrowly cuneate; venation elongate throughout, with some secondary venation and included blind veinlets, median band lacking; epidermal cells elongate with wavy walls; stomata strongly aligned. Fertile spike 55–90 mm long, with 11–19 pairs of sporangia, fertile spike:lamina length ratio ± 2.5:1. Spores 40–45 µm in equatorial diameter, alete, muri broad, of uneven width and somewhat discontinuous, lumina reduced to narrow pits, granules lacking. Fig. 2/2 (p. 7).
Range
DISTR. U 2; K 4
Altitude range
800–1600 m
Distribution
UGANDA Kigezi District Queen Elizabeth Park, Ishasha Southern Circuit, 9 Dec. 1969, Lock 69/426! pro parteKENYA Kiambu District Ruiru, just S of Ruiru High School, 9 May 1971, Faden & Evans 71/391!
Distribution (external)
; Angola
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Botswana
Notes
This taxon closely resembles O. lancifolium C. Presl, the type of which is from Mauritius. However the type material is too scanty to define the species clearly and until either new topotypic material is collected, or spore samples from the type material can be examined by SEM, it is impossible in a genus as difficult as Ophioglossum to be certain that this taxon is synonymous with O. lancifolium. See also Burrows in Bothalia 23: 188 (1993).
╳
We're sorry. You don't appear to have permission to access the item.
Full access to these resources typically requires affiliation with a partnering organization. (For example, researchers are often granted access through their affiliation with a university library.)
If you have an institutional affiliation that provides you access, try logging in via your institution
Have access with an individual account? Login here
If you would like to learn more about access options or believe you received this message in error, please contact us.