Identifying Southwest Florida's Ferns

Aquatic & Floating Fronds



To identify a floating/aquatic fern, begin with the first question and continue until you get a "yes" answer.


1. Are the fronds round, fingertip-sized, hairy, and in loose floating mats? YES, or

1. Are the fronds irregulary branched like a flattened juniper twig (float)? YES, or

1. Are the fronds long and antler-like, and are the stems almost "spongy" in appearance (rooted)? YES, or

1. Are the fronds large (5 to 10 inches), upright, and with strongly lobed leaves (rooted)? YES, or

1. Is the frond shaped like a 4-leaf clover and rooted in mud (usually in standing rather than moving water)? YES

There are no more aquatic/floating frond questions. If it is an aquatic/floating frond , the answer to one of the above five questions will be a "yes."

 

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.


Salvinia minima

(Salvinia, Water Spangles)

floating frond

Description
round or oval, undivided, paired and opposite, 1/4-1/2" long; upper leaf surface clothed with stiff branched hairs which trap air and help plant stay upright (will flip back over when dropped in water upside-down)
Rhizome
floating on water surface or creeping on mud during dry-downs
Spores many fine "hairs" attached to the underside of the pair of leaves are actually a third submerged leaf bearing round sporocarps; spores released underwater from this third leaf
Veins not really
Growth floating ferns; common where it's too shady for water lettuce ot occur
Similar sometimes misidentified as Duckweed, whose leaves are only 1/3 as large, shaped more like grains of rice, and float individually


Azolla caroliniana

(Azolla, Mosquito Fern)

floating frond

Description
leaves minute (less than 1/2" long); smooth; branch in equal forkings along rhizome; borne in two rows; each leaf has two round lobes, the upper one green and the lower one colorless; delicate, lacy appearance; in cooler weather, has reddish cast
Rhizome
hair-like, branched; roots thread-like
Spores sporangia produced in separate round structures (sporocarps) located in leaf axils
Veins not really
Growth floating fern; open water, often with Salvinia
Similar none


Ceratopteris thalictroides (exotic)

(Water Horn Fern, Water Sprite)

floating frond

Description
an aquatic fern with a rooted stem (petiole) which is green, longitudinally ridged and furrowed, and spongy in appearance (photo above right); numerous erect fronds to 3 feet or more in length; fertile fronds are narrow, linear; sterile fronds are more leaf-like; fertile blades deeply bi- to tri- to quadri-pinnate-pinnatifid and deeply lobed (photo above left)
Rhizome
thick mass of roots under the surface of the water, frequently anchored in tussocks and mud
Spores one to three rows on the lower surface of the fertile fronds; often enclosed by the strongly "rolled" leaf margins
Veins not visible
Growth aquatic to semiaquatic in slow-moving rivers, ponds, and other slow-moving water
Similar Floating Water Fern (Ceratopteris pteridoides) whose fronds are shorter (to 50 cm) and whose petiole is mostly more than 10mm wide
Notes a short-lived aquatic or semi-aquatic species


Ceratopteris pteridoides (rare)

(Floating Water Fern, Floating Antler Fern)

aquatic/floating frond

Description
typically floating-leaved to sometimes rooted; fronds deltate to triangular in overall outline; fertile fronds with linear segments; sterile fronds shorter and wider, more leaf-like; stem (petiole) longitudinally ridged and furrowed and spongy-looking
Rhizome
thick mass of roots under the surface of the water, frequently anchored in mud and/or tussocks
Spores borne in crowded rows about halfway between midvein and margins; leaf edges strongly inrolled, almost encasing the sori
Veins not noticeable
Growth aquatic or semiaquatic in ponds and slow-moving rivers; usually floating but sometimes anchored in mud
Similar Water Horn Fern (Ceratopteris thalictroides) has narrower petioles (stems) less than 10 mm wide and fronds are longer
Notes a short-lived aquatic or semi-aquatic species


Marsilea vestita (rare)

(Water Clover)

aquatic/floating frond

Description
slender stems; clustered fronds; frond divided into four spreading segments giving the appearance of a large four-leaf clover, circular overall in outline
Rhizome
rise at leaf nodes
Spores found in hairy sporocarp (beanlike structure about the size of a peppercorn that contains the sori) that grows from the roots on a very short stalk
Veins not noticeable, but radiate out from point where four segments separate
Growth aquatic, sometimes floating fern although it can also be found in moist roadside ditches and moist to dry soil of lawns and flower beds
Similar none in South Florida