Clinton'S Wood Fern vs Common Male Fern
Dryopteris clintoniana compared with Dryopteris filix-mas
Key Differences
- Clinton'S Wood Fern is Not Evaluated while Common Male Fern is Least Concern.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | Clinton'S Wood Fern | Common Male Fern |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Plantae (Plants) | Plantae (Plants) |
| Phylum same | Tracheophyta | Tracheophyta |
| Class same | Polypodiopsida (Polypodiopsida) | Polypodiopsida (Polypodiopsida) |
| Order same | Polypodiales (Polypodiales) | Polypodiales (Polypodiales) |
| Family same | Dryopteridaceae | Dryopteridaceae |
| Genus same | Dryopteris | Dryopteris |
| Species | Dryopteris clintoniana | Dryopteris filix-mas |
Evolutionary Relationship
Clinton'S Wood Fern and Common Male Fern share a common ancestor at the Genus level: Dryopteris.
Conservation Status
Clinton'S Wood Fern
NE — Not EvaluatedCommon Male Fern
LC — Least ConcernPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | Clinton'S Wood Fern | Common Male Fern |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | — | — |
| Average Lifespan | — | — |
| Average Length | — | — |
| Average Weight | — | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
Clinton'S Wood Fern
Typically found in moist, shaded forest floors and tropical canopies.
Distributed across Canada and United States.
Common Male Fern
Typically found in moist, shaded forest floors and tropical canopies.
Widely distributed across Europe (7 countries), North America (United States), Oceania and the Pacific (New Zealand), and South America (Chile).
Clinton'S Wood Fern
Clinton's Wood Fern, Dryopteris clintoniana, is a large, robust fern in the family Dryopteridaceae native to eastern North America, ranging from Nova Scotia and New England south through the Appalachian Mountains and the Great Lakes region. It inhabits rich, moist, shaded forests including floodplain woodland, mesic slopes, and forested wetland margins, growing in soils with abundant leaf litter and high organic matter content. Clinton's Wood Fern is a tetraploid hybrid fern, arising from crosses between Dryopteris cristata (Crested Wood Fern) and Dryopteris goldiana (Goldie's Fern), and inherits intermediate characteristics from both parents. The fronds are large, once-pinnate to pinnate-pinnatifid, with broad, dark green pinnae that have rounded, finely toothed lobes. Like many hybrid ferns, it is fertile and reproduces apogamously. The species is named for DeWitt Clinton, as is Clinton's Bulrush, reflecting his early contributions to American natural history. Clinton's Wood Fern is considered relatively rare within its range, partly because it requires the specific combination of parental species in suitable habitat. Threats include forest clearance, invasive species, and changes in forest hydrology. It is listed as a species of conservation concern in several northeastern states.
Common Male Fern
<em>Dryopteris filix-mas</em>, the common male fern, is a robust, semi-evergreen fern in the family Dryopteridaceae, widely distributed across Europe, North America, Oceania, and South America. It is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List. This species typically grows in moist, shaded forest floors, hedgebanks, rocky slopes, and stream margins, preferring acidic to neutral soils in temperate environments. The common male fern produces large, pinnate fronds that can reach over one metre in length, arising from a central crown of scaly rhizomes. It is one of the most familiar ferns of the Northern Hemisphere and has been used medicinally for centuries, with extracts historically employed as an anthelmintic to treat tapeworm infections. The species reproduces via spores produced in kidney-shaped sori arranged in rows on the undersides of fertile fronds. Common male fern plays an important role in forest ecosystems, providing shelter and habitat structure for invertebrates and small vertebrates across its broad temperate range.
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