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9. Asplenium adulterinum J. Milde, Höh. Sporenpfl. Deutschl.  40.  1865.  
Adulterated spleenwort  
 
 
 
 
 
Roots  not proliferous.  Stems  short-creeping, mainly unbranched; scales black or with narrow pale borders, narrowly lanceolate, 1.5--3 × 0.2--0.4 mm, margins entire.  Leaves  monomorphic.  Petiole  dark reddish brown throughout, 1--4 mm; indument of black linear scales at base.  Blade  linear, 1-pinnate, 2.5--14 × 0.5--1.2 cm, thick (open habitat) to herbaceous (shaded, moist habitat), essentially glabrous; base somewhat tapered; apex obtuse, not rooting.  Rachis  reddish brown in proximal 1/2--4/5, green distally, lustrous, glabrous.  Pinnae  in 10--30 pairs, ovate to rhombic to ovate-oblong, 2.5--11 × 2--6 mm; base truncate to shortly acute; margins shallowly crenate (shade forms) to essentially entire (exposed forms); apex obtuse, broadly rounded.  Veins  free, evident to obscure.  Sori  1--3 pairs per pinna on both basiscopic and acroscopic sides.  Spores  64 per sporangium. 2 n  = 144. 
 
 
 
Crevices in limestone; 1250 m; B.C.; Europe. 
In North America Asplenium adulterinum is known to occur on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, where only the fertile allotetraploids are known. It is likely to occur in areas where the two parents, A . trichomanes and A . trichomanes-ramosum , grow together. The genetics of the American plants should be compared with that of the European, among which two nothosubspecies occur (F. Mokry et al. 1986). 
 
 
 
 
                         
                             
	 
                      
                         
		
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