Description:
This perennial fern consists of a single sterile leaf and a
single fertile leaf (although the latter is not always produced). The
petioles of these two leaves are joined together at the base
near the ground surface. The evergreen sterile leaf is produced
during the spring or fall and it persists through the winter. The
sterile leaf is
up to 6" long, 6" across and broadly deltate in outline; this leaf
is held horizontally to the ground or it is slightly ascending. The
sterile leaf is mostly bipinnate-bipinnatifid in
structure; it is pinnately divided into about 6 pairs of leaflets and a
terminal leaflet; the basal leaflets are by far the largest, after
which
the leaflets becoming progressively smaller toward the tip of the
sterile leaf. Each leaflet is pinnately divided into 3-6 pairs of
subleaflets and a terminal subleaflet that are lanceolate to oblong in
shape. Each subleaflet is pinnately divided into 3-8
rectangular-obovate to ovate lobes that have cleft sublobes and small
dentate teeth. These
sublobes and teeth are concentrated primarily along the outer half of
most lobes. The basal leaflets sometimes have basal subleaflets that
are partially subdivided into even smaller subleaflets (or ultimate
leaflets), rather than lobes. The upper surface of the
sterile leaf is medium to dark green and glabrous, while its lower
surface is medium green and glabrous. The petiole of the sterile leaf
is up to 6" long, somewhat succulent, light green to brown, and
glabrous; its petiole is flattened and grooved along the upper side,
otherwise it
is terete.
The petiole of the fertile leaf originates from the same
stalk as the petiole of the sterile leaf, but they diverge from each
other near the ground surface. This latter petiole is up to 12" long,
somewhat succulent, light green to brown, glabrous, and fully terete.
The compound fertile leaf is up to 6" long and 4" across, ultimately
becoming erect; it is medium green and glabrous. The compound fertile
leaf is severely
constricted; it has a branching stalk-like appearance,
resembling a panicle of sporangia. The globoid sporangia
(about 1 mm. across at maturity) are located along the terminal
branches of the fertile leaf. The sporangia are pale yellow and
glabrous. At maturity, each sporangium splits open to release
its pale yellow to white spores to the wind. This typically occurs
during late fall or early winter. At this time, the fertile leaf turns
brown and dries up, persisting in this state through the winter and
into the following year.
After exposure to hard frost and cold winter temperatures, the
evergreen sterile leaf of this fern assumes a brownish bronze
coloration that persists until it withers away during the following
spring. The root system
is fleshy and fibrous.
Cultivation:
The preference is partial sun to medium shade, moist to dry-mesic
conditions, and soil containing loam or sandy loam with decaying
organic material. This fern is slow to develop from its spores, as the
subterranean body of the fern (or prothallus) that results from its
sexual phase
lacks chlorophyll. At this stage of development (lasting 5 or more
years), it is totally dependent on mycorrhizal fungi
for survival.
Even when the emergent sterile and fertile leaves of this fern develop,
it is still
partially dependent on such fungi for many of its nutrients. It has
been estimated that the Cutleaf Grapefern can live for about
10 to 45 years (Chadde & Kudray, 2001). Because there
is no easy way to cultivate this fern, it is rarely, if ever, available
from commercial markets.
Range & Habitat: The native Cutleaf
Grapefern is scattered across Illinois, where it is uncommon (see
Distribution
Map).
Habitats
include sandy grasslands, open disturbed woodlands, upland woodlands,
bottomland
woodlands, wooded ravines, wooded slopes of bluffs, shaded roadsides,
areas along woodland paths, edges of swamps, and pastures. This
evergreen fern favors woodlands with deciduous trees as it is able to
conduct photosynthesis during the warmer days of fall, winter, and
spring after the tree leaves have fallen. Upland woodlands are
typically dominated by oaks and hickories,
while lowland woodlands are typically dominated by maples and basswood.
The Cutleaf Grapefern (
Botrychium
dissectum dissectum) often
occurs with the more common Bronze Fern (
Botrychium dissectum
obliquum). Fidelity to any particular habitat is low.
Faunal
Associations: Very little is known about
floral-faunal relationships for this fern. The Wild Turkey and probably
the Ruffed Grouse feed on the leaves, as does the
White-Tailed Deer. Predation of the leaves is mostly likely to occur
during the spring and fall, when the Cutleaf Grapefern is more
conspicuous. The impact of such browsing on the
survival of this fern is less than what might be expected because it
derives many of its nutrients from underground fungi (Chadde &
Kudray, 2001).
Photographic
Location: Along a woodland path at Walnut Point State Park
in Douglas County, Illinois.
Comments:
The finely dissected sterile leaves of this small attractive fern are
distinctive. It is possible to confuse Cutleaf Grape Fern (
Botrychium
dissectum dissectum) with the Rattlesnake Fern (
Botrychium
virginianum), although plants of this latter fern have
sterile leaves that
are deciduous, rather than evergreen. In addition, each sterile leaf
of this latter fern is sessile against the central stalk that
it shares with the developing fertile leaf (during those years
when the latter occurs). In spite of the fact
that they are considered different varieties of the same species, the
Cutleaf Grape Fern looks very different from the more common Bronze
Fern (
Botrychium
dissectum obliquum). The sterile leaves of the latter
fern are less dissected and the terminal leaflets of its subdivisions
are often relatively large and trowel-shaped.