Marattiaceae

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Marattiaceae is the only family of extant (living) ferns in the order Marattiales.<ref name=PPGI/><ref name=SmitPryeSchuKora06/> In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), Marattiales is the only order in the subclass Marattiidae. The family has six genera and about 110 species.<ref name=PPGI/> Many are different in appearance from other ferns, having large fronds and fleshy rootstocks.

Description

The Marattiaceae diverged from other ferns very early in their evolutionary history and are quite different from many plants familiar to people in temperate zones. Many of them have massive, fleshy rootstocks and the largest known fronds of any fern. The Marattiaceae is one of two groups of ferns traditionally known as eusporangiate ferns, meaning that the sporangium is formed from a group of cells as opposed to a leptosporangium in which there is a single initial cell. At least two genera, Angiopteris and Marattia, have been reported to undergo monoplastidic meiosis rather than polyplastidic meiosis, and are the only known examples within euphyllophytes to do so.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The large fronds characteristic of the group are most readily found in the genus Angiopteris, native to Australasia, Madagascar and Oceania. These fronds may be up to 9 meters long in the species Angiopteris teysmanniana of Java. In the Hawaiian Islands, Costa Rica, and Jamaica, the species Angiopteris evecta is naturalized, having escaped from botanical gardens, and is considered an invasive species.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Angiopteris is unique among ferns in having explosively dispersed spores, which may contribute to its ability to spread.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Marattia in the strict sense is found in the neotropics and Hawaii with six recognized species. The genus Eupodium is also neotropical, with three species, and was originally described for the distinctive stalked synangia of some species.

Ptisana is a paleotropical genus, formerly thought to be part of Marattia. These plants are 2-4 times pinnate, with fronds often comparable in size to those found in Angiopteris. Terminal segments usually have a prominent suture where they attach.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref> The sporangia lack the labiate apertures of Marattia and Eupodium, and synangia are deeply cut. The name of the genus derives from the resemblance of the synangia to pearl barley. The king fern, Ptisana salicina, from New Zealand and the South Pacific and known in Māori as "para" now has been placed in this genus. Sometimes called the potato fern, this is a large fern with an edible fleshy rhizome that is used as a food source by some indigenous peoples.

The East-Asian genus Christensenia, named after the Danish pteridologist Carl Christensen, is an uncommon fern with distinctive fronds resembling a horse chestnut leaf, hence the species Christensenia aesculifolia, meaning horse-chestnut-leaved Christensenia. Despite the relatively diminutive size of plants in this genus, the stomata of Christensenia are the largest known in the plant kingdom.<ref name=Bell00/>

The genus Danaea is endemic to the Neotropics. They have bipinnate leaves with opposite pinnae, which are dimorphic, the fertile leaves much contracted, and covered below with sunken, linear synangia dehiscing via pores.<ref name=Chri10/>

Taxonomy

in the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), Marattiaceae is the only family in the order Marattiales, which in turn is the only order in the subclass Marattiidae. Marattiidae is one of four subclasses of class Polypodiopsida (ferns), to which it is related as shown in this cladogram, being a sister group to Polypodiidae.<ref name=PPGI/> Template:Clade

History of classification

In the molecular phylogenetic classification of Smith et al. in 2006, the Marattiales formed the single member of the class Marattiopsida. Four genera were recognized.<ref name=SmitPryeSchuKora06/> The class was lowered in rank to the subclass Marattiidae in the 2009 classification of Mark W. Chase and James L. Reveal,<ref name=ChasReve09/> and subsequent systems such as Christenhusz et al. (2011).<ref name=ChriZhanSchn11/><ref name=ChriChas14/> The Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group (2016) classification retains this rank. In that system, Marattiidae is monotypic and has one order, Marattiales, one family, Marattiaceae, six genera, and an estimated 111 species.<ref name=PPGI/>

There have long been four traditional extant genera (Angiopteris, Christensenia, Danaea and Marattia), but phylogenetic analysis has determined the genus Marattia to be paraphyletic, and the genus has been split into three genera, Marattia in the strict sense, Eupodium, and Ptisana.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=ChriZhanSchn11/> Christenhusz and Chase placed Danaea in subfamily Danaeoideae and the remaining genera in subfamily Marattioideae,<ref name=ChriChas14/> but this subfamilial classification was not taken up by PPG I.<ref name=PPGI/>

This fern group has a long fossil history with many extinct taxa (Psaronius, Asterotheca, Scolecopteris, Eoangiopteris, Qasimia, Marantoidea, Danaeites, Marattiopsis, Ptychocarpus, etc.).

Genera

Exploring the phylogeny of the marattialean ferns<ref name=":0" /><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Fern Tree of Life<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Six genera are accepted in the PPG I classification:<ref name=PPGI/>

Several other genera have been named in the Marattiaceae, namely: Archangiopteris, Clementea, Macroglossum, Protangiopteris, Protomarattia and Psilodochea. These are currently treated as synonyms of Angiopteris.<ref name=PPGI/>

Evolutionary history

Marattiaceae are one of the earliest branching lineages of ferns. The earliest members of the family appeared during the Carboniferous, over 300 million years ago. The group has an extensive fossil record extending from the Carboniferous into the Jurassic, but post-Jurassic records are scarce.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

References

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