Note: This is a project under development. The articles on this wiki are just being initiated and broadly incomplete. You can Help creating new pages.
Difference between revisions of "Asplenium scolopendrium - Hart's tongue fern"
(Created page with "thumb|right|''Asplenium scolopendrium'', ''Hart's-tongue fern'' '''Asplenium scolopendrium''', known as hart's-tongue<ref name="c...") |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 14:13, 24 December 2016
Asplenium scolopendrium, known as hart's-tongue[1] or hart's-tongue fern (syn. Phyllitis scolopendrium) is a fern in the genus Asplenium, of the Northern Hemisphere.
Contents
Description
The plants are unusual in being ferns with simple, undivided fronds. The tongue-shaped leaves have given rise to the common name "Hart's tongue fern"; a hart being an adult male red deer. The sori pattern is reminiscent of a centipede's legs, and scolopendrium is Latin for "centipede". The leaves are 10–60 cm long and 3–6 cm broad, with sori arranged in rows perpendicular to the rachis.
Uses
- Asplenium scolopendrium is often grown as an ornamental plant, with several cultivars selected with varying frond form, including with frilled frond margins, forked fronds and cristate forms.
- This fern was used in the 1800s as a medicinal plant in folk medicine as a spleen tonic and for other uses.