Platycerium superbum
Staghorn fern | |
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Staghorn Fern at North Coast Regional Botanic Garden, Australia | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Division: | Pteridophyta |
Class: | Pteridopsida |
Order: | Polypodiales |
Family: | Polypodiaceae |
Genus: | Platycerium |
Species: | P. superbum |
Binomial name | |
Platycerium superbum de Jonch. & Hennipman | |
Platycerium superbum, commonly known as the staghorn fern, is a Platycerium species of fern. It is native to Australia.
Distribution
The fern is native to north-east New South Wales (north of Nabiac) and Queensland.[1] It can also be found in parts of Malaysia.[2] In propagated form, the plant is grown successfully as far south as Victoria.[3]
During the 1990s, the fern was also discovered on the Hawaiian Islands where they are now considered a "problem species".[4]
Features
Platycerium superbum is a bracket epiphyte naturally occurring in and near rainforests but is now also widely cultivated as an ornamental plant for gardens.
In both naturally occurring and propagated forms, these ferns develop a humus-collecting "nest" of non-fertile fronds and in doing so can grown up to 1 metre wide. The ferns also develop hanging fertile fronds that can reach up to 2 metres long.[2]
Both fertile and non-fertile fronds are broad and branching and grown to resemble the horns of a stag or elk, thus the common names stag horn or elk horn.[2]
Nutrition
In the wild, the nest structure captures falling leaves and other detritus which then decomposes to provide the plant with nutrients.[3] The ferns are known to favour a slightly acidic environment and so to encourage growth in propagated plants, some growers recommend adding used tea leaves directly to the plant's "nest".[2] Others recommend doing the same with banana peel.[5]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Platycerium superbum. |
- ↑ Platycerium superbum de Jonch. & Hennipman by Peter G. Wilson (National Herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney)
- 1 2 3 4 Platycerium superbum (Australian Native Plants Society)
- 1 2 Platycerium superbum by Pippa Lloyd (Australian National Botanic Gardens, 2006)
- ↑ Fern Ecology by Klaus Mehltreter, Lawrence R. Walker & Joanne M. Sharpe (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
- ↑ Pat Welsh's Southern California Organic Gardening (3rd Edition): Month by Month by Pat Welsh (Chronicle Books, 2009)