Gymnocarpium jessoense ssp. parvulum Sarvela
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TAXONOMY
 
Family: Dryopteridaceae
Genus: Gymnocarpium
 
Species Synonyms: none
Common Names: limestone oak-fern
asian oakfern
 
DISTRIBUTION
 
Canada: Yukon Territory – Mackenzie District – northern British Columbia – northern Saskatchewan – Ontario, eastern Quebec – New Brunswick
Saskatchewan: northern Saskatchewan; Lake Athabasca – Hasbala Lake – Deschambault Lake
Ecoregion: Athabasca Plain, Churchill River Upland, Tazin Lake Upland, Selwyn Lake Upland
 
HABITAT
 
Saskatchewan: woods, on granitic slopes and outcrops
 
RARITY STATUS
 
Provincial Status According
to Harms (2003):
Vulnerable
Nature Conservancy Status:
G5T4 S2S3
Saskatchewan Species at
Risk Status:
None
COSEWIC Status:
None
 
Gymnocarpium jessoense ssp. parvulum is vulnerable in Saskatchewan because it is rare or uncommon. Local population sizes vary. No immediate threats are known for this species.
 
SPECIES DESCRIPTION
 
Roots: rhizome slender, creeping, blackish; scales 1 – 4 mm
Fronds: monomorphic, scattered
Stipes: 5 – 25 cm, longer than blade, slender, straw-coloured, base dark, dull, glandular; scales 2 – 6 mm
Blades: 3 – 14 cm long, broadly triangular or 5-sided in outline, bipinnate-pinnatifed to tripinnate-pinnatifed, firm, glandular on both sides
Pinnae: articulate to rachis, long stalked, two lowest pinnae half as long as terminal one, 2 – 9 cm long, strongly curved towards apex of leaf; veins forked, reaching margin
Pinnules: apex obtuse
Indusia: absent
Sori: rounded
 
GYMNOCARPIUM KEY FOR SPECIES FOUND IN SASKATCHEWAN
 
1 Small, blackish malformed spores and large brown round spores; moderately glandular on abaxial surface
G. X intermedium
1 Spores all brownish; either densely glandular or essentially glabrous on abaxial surface
2
   
2 Rachis and frond abaxially glandular, blade firm, two lowest blade divisions 1/2 as long as terminal one; stipe and rachis dull
G. jessoense var. parvulum
2 Rachis and frond abaxially glabrous, blade delicate; two lowest blade divisions nearly as long as terminal one; stipe and rachis lustrous
G. dryopteris