Pteridaceae
Submarginal sori that lack indusia or are protected by a reflexed or revolute leaf margin. Here 7 genera.

Adiantum Linnaeus

Maidenhair fern

Etymology Adiantum is from the Greek, adiantos, meaning unwettable, referring to the water-repellent fronds.
Description Rhizome: suberect to long-creeping, absent or hairy or scaly.
Frond: deciduous, monomorphic.
Stipe: chestnut brown to dark purple, grooved above, glabrous or few scales, vascular bundles: 1 or 2.
Blade: 1-3 pinnate or pedate, lanceolate, ovate, trowel-shaped, or fan-shaped, membranaceous to papery, commonly glabrous.
segments round, fan-shaped, rhombic, or oblong with marginal teeth, lacking a midrib, veins free, forking.
Sori: sporangia, submarginal, indusium: false, inrolled margins, sporangia: yellow or yellowish brown.
Distinctive Characteristics FNA states that sporangia borne on the lower surface of the false indusium are both necessary and sufficient to define the genus. However, lacking a high-powered lens, the amateur will need additional criteria. The lack of a midrib in the ultimate segments is unique among the hardy ferns here.
Adiantum pedatum
Adiantum pedatum. False indusium.  Photo by Rod Tulloss, © Environmental Commission of the Borough of Roosevelt and the Fund for Roosevelt, Inc.

Aspidotis (Nuttall ex Hooker & Baker) Copeland

Lace fern

Etymology From the Greek aspidotes, shield-bearer, referring to the shield-like false indusia.
Description Rhizome: short-creeping, scales brown to black or often bicolored with dark central stripe.
Frond: evergreen, monomorphic or nearly so.
Stipe: dark reddish brown, with single groove, glabrous, vascular bundles: 1.
Blade: 3-pinnate at base, or more, triangular, leathery , glabrous.
segments linear, veins obscure, free.
Sori: sporangia, submarginal, continuous along length of segments except at apex, indusium: false, inrolled margin, broad, thin, dry, sporangia: dark brown.
Distinctive Characteristics Separated from Cheilanthes based on its elongate, distantly dentate, glabrous, pointed segments with striate shining surface and on its broad, thin, dry indusia.
Aspidotis
Aspidotis. Habitat: Sierra Plumas Eureka State Park (Plumas County, California, US)  Gerald and Buff Corsi © California Academy of Sciences

Astrolepis D. M. Benham & Windham

Star-scaled cloak fern

Etymology Greek: Astro, star + lepis, scale. This refers to the starlike scales on the upper blade surface.
Description Rhizome: short-creeping, scales tan to chestnut brown, linear.
Frond: evergreen, monomorphic.
Stipe: dull chestnut brown or straw-colored, rounded above, scaly, vascular bundles: 2.
Blade: 1-pinnate, the pinnae varying from lobed to pinnatifid, linear, leathery, star-shaped scales on the upper surface.
Pinnae: 3-6 lobes per pinna, veins obscure, free, forking.
Sori: clustered near notches between pinna lobes, along veins near margin, indusium: absent, sporangia: light to dark brown.
Distinctive Characteristics The combination of linear, pinnate leaves, two vascular bundles in the petioles, and unique star-like scales on the upper blade surface separate Astrolepis from the related Cheilanthes.
Astrolepis
Astrolepis has star-like scales on the upper surface, best seen with a hand lens.
 from Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness at wnmu.edu

Cheilanthes Swartz

Lip fern

Etymology Greek: From cheilos, lip + anthos, flower. A lip-like false indusium covers the sporangia.
Description Rhizome: erect to long-creeping, scales brown to black or often bicolored with dark central stripe.
Frond: evergreen, monomorphic.
Stipe: brown to black or straw-colored, rounded, flattened, or with single longitudinal groove above, hairy, scaly, or glabrous, vascular bundles: 1.
Blade: pinnate-pinnatifid to 4-pinnate at base, leathery or rarely somewhat herbaceous, finely hairy and/or scaly below, finely hairy or glabrous above.
segments entire, stalked or sessile, fertile segment margins slightly enrolled to cover sporangia, veins free.
Sori: sporangia, submarginal, indusium: false, sporangia: brown to black or gray.
Cheilanthes
Cheilanthes lanosa.  Photo: Tom Stuart

Cryptogramma R. Brown

Parsley fern

Etymology Greek: kryptos, hidden + gramme, line. The reflexed leaf margin hides the line of sori.
Description Rhizome: erect to creeping, scales colorless or brownish, concolored or bicolored, ovate, lanceolate or linear.
Frond: deciduous or evergreen, dimorphic.
Stipe: dark brown proximally, light brown to green distally, with single longitudinal groove above, scaly, vascular bundles: 2.
Blade: 2-3 pinnate, deltate, lanceolate to elliptic, somewhat leathery or herbaceous to membranaceous, glabrous or sparsely hairy above, glabrous below.
segments sterile: toothed, veins free.
Sori: scattered along veins, submarginal, indusium: false, strongly enrolled, sporangia: yellow.
Cryptogramma crispa
Cryptogramma crispa. Creeping habit; sporeling.  Illustration from Scandinavian Ferns by Benjamin Øllgaard and Kirsten Tind, Rhodos, 1993.

Pellaea Link

Cliff brake

Etymology From the Greek pellos, dusky, describing the bluish-gray coloring.
Description Rhizome: short to long-creeping, bicolorous scales with a central stripe or brown.
Frond: evergreen, monomorphic to somewhat dimorphic.
Stipe: dark, shiny, rounded, flattened or with single longitudinal groove above, glabrous or pubescent, usually with a few scales at base, vascular bundles: 1.
Blade: 1-3 pinnate with terminal leaflet, linear to ovate-deltate, leathery or rarely somewhat herbaceous, below glabrous, pubescent, or with hairlike scales scattered along costae, above usually glabrous.
segments broad, stalked or sessile, veins free or rarely netted.
Sori: oblong or linearly joined, submarginal, indusium: absent or false, sporangia: brown.
Distinctive Characteristics dark, shiny stipes, 1-(or 2- or 3-)pinnately-divided blades with a terminal leaflet, and a false indusium.
Pellaea atropupurea
Pellaea atropurpurea.  Photo: Tim Kessenich, from the Wisconsin State Herbarium web site

Pteris Linnaeus

Brake fern

Etymology Greek: from pteron, a wing, referring to the shape of the pinnae, but the word pteris was used by the ancient Greeks for ferns in general..
Description Rhizome: erect to short-creeping, scales pale brown to black, concolored, elongate.
Frond: deciduous, monomorphic or somewhat dimorphic.
Stipe: longitudinally ridged, 2--3-grooved above, scaly at base, glabrous or scaly distally, vascular bundles: 1 or more.
Blade: 1-4 pinnate, oblong to lanceolate to deltate, herbaceous to leathery.
segments sessile to short-stalked, linear to oblong-lanceolate, veins conspicuous, free.
Sori: continuous, submarginal, indusium: false, sporangia: brown.
Pteris multifida
Pteris multifida. Habitat.  From the Botanical Garden site of Shigenobu Aoki.

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