Your search found 16 image(s) of fronds of Netted Chain Fern and Sensitive Fern.
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Habitat: Marshes, swamps, ditches, wet disturbed places
Pinnae of fertile blade erect, 2-7cm long, per Field Guide to the Ferns and Other Pteridophytes of Georgia (Snyder & Bruce, 1986).
Pinnae have undulate to shallowly lobed margins, per Ferns of the Smokies (Evans, 2005).
Pinnae tend to be opposite (those of Woodwardia areolata tend to be alternate), per Weakley's Flora.
The rachis is winged, joining the opposite pinnae to each other , per Ferns of the Smokies (Evans, 2005).
Fertile leaves are much reduced, but taller, narrower, and twice-pinnate, per Ferns of the Smokies (Evans, 2005).
Fertile leaves' pinna lobes tightly rolled around the sori, "beadlike", per Ferns of the Smokies (Evans, 2005).
Habitat: Moist to wet, acid, organic soils, such as bogs, blackwater bottomlands, pocosins, wet hammocks
Pinnae tend to be acute or acuminate (vs. Onoclea's obtuse), per Weakley's Flora.
[Sterile frond on left, fertile on right.] Leaves strongly dimorphic, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Prominent veins conspicuously netted, per Field Guide to the Ferns and Other Pteridophytes of Georgia (Snyder & Bruce, 1986).
Sori are large, elongate, and in two chains like links of sausage, per Ferns of the Smokies (Evans, 2005).
Pinnae of fertile leaves with 2 rows of linear sori; indusia firm & persistent, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).