Species

Pteris ensiformis

Etymology

Pteris: A fern known to the ancient Greeks; from the Greek pteris

Common Name(s)

slender bracken

Authority

Pteris ensiformis Burm.f.

Family

Pteridaceae

Flora Category

Vascular - Exotic

Structural Class

Ferns

Distribution

Exotic. New Zealand: North Island (sparingly naturalised in Auckland and Hamilton), Widespread throughout the tropics - apparently only indigenous to India, Sri Lanka, Australia (north-eastern Queensland), South East Asia and Polynesia (as far east as Samoa)

Habitat

Stone, brick and block retaining walls and wasteland in urban areas

Features

Short slender (gracile) terrestrial and/or lithophytic ferns. Rhizome short creeping to suberect, scaly; scales narrowly triangular, brown. Fronds ± dimorphic. Stipe to 200 mm long, pale green; base scaly. Lamina 1-pinnate, with pinnae (apart from apical pinna) increasing in length from apex to base. Sterile lamina c.200 mm long; lower pinnae pinnate to pinnatifid, to 160 mm long; ultimate segments c.8-10 mm wide, oblong to ovate, irregularly serrate. Fertile lamina to 300 mm long, narrower than sterile; pinnae forked near their base; ultimate segments linear to narrowly oblong, serrate only at their apices. Veins free, oblique, 1-2-forked. Sori continuous from near base to near apices of fertile pinnae or pinnules; paraphyses scarce.

Similar Taxa

Distinguished from the other indigenous and naturalised species of Pteris in New Zealand by the smaller stature, strongly dimorphic, variegated, 1-pinnate (lowermost pinnae 1-pinnate-pinnatifid) oblong to ovate fronds up to 500 mm long, with free veins and stalked undivided pinnae and pinnae segments (sometimes more broadly attached but never decurrent on rachis or costae). Pteris ensiformis is, in New Zealand anyway, a rather delicate little fern.

Flowering

Not Applicable - Spore Producing

Flower Colours

No Flowers

Fruiting

Not Applicable - Spore Producing

Propagation Technique

Easily grown from spores and inclined to be weedy but cold sensitive which appears to restrict its ability to spread

Year Naturalised

2009

Origin

Presumably naturalised via the horticultural trade as this species was once a popular pot plant sold widely throughout New Zealand during the 1970s

Control Techniques

Not very invasive although it can be weedy in suitable habitats. Being cold sensitive it is virtually confined to crevices in stone, brick and concrete block walls where it can be a minor problem.

Notes

New Zealand collections are all represented by a variegated form (P. ensiformis cv. Victoriae) which was widely sold in nurseries during the 1970s. In this form the inner portions of the pinnae are coloured mikly white to yellow and the outer dark green to yellow-green.

References 


Kramer, K.U.; McCarthy, P.M. 1998: Pteridiaceae. Pp. 241-248. Flora of Australia 48. Australian Biological Resources Study, CSIRO Canberra

Fact Sheet Prepared for NZPCN by: P.J. de Lange (18 January 2012). Description adapted from Kramer & McCarthy (1998).

This page last updated on 25 Jul 2014