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Native Plant Trust: Go Botany Discover thousands of New England plants

Ferns: Is your plant in one of these subgroups?

Please go through the subgroups in order.

True ferns and moonworts

Ferns, moonworts, and Adder's-tongues with obvious leaves

Key characteristics

Many true ferns have highly dissected, feathery leaves. Look for spores on the underside of a leaf or on a separate leaf or specialized portion of leaf. Spores look like brownish dust when ripe. The structures bearing spores are often grouped into clusters called sori. Sometimes sori are covered with a special flap of tissue on the edge of a leaf, or take the shape of beads or goblets.

Exceptions

You'll never see a flower on a fern! Some flowering plants have very feathery leaves, so look carefully to see if flowers or fruits are present.

Video about this subgroup

True ferns, moonworts

Clubmosses and relatives, plus quillworts

Plants in the families Lycopodiaceae or Isoetaceae

Key characteristics

These are spore-bearing plants with simple, unlobed, often scale-like leaves. Many grow along the ground attached by horizontally running shoots. They may have single upright stems, or be branched and look like miniature trees. Some species (e.g., spikemosses) look like true mosses with tiny leaves. The quillworts (Isoetes species) are small aquatic plants that resemble chives.

Exceptions

You may need to look carefully for the spores, which are sometimes tucked down inside the leaves.

Video about this subgroup

Clubmosses, relatives + quillworts

Horsetails and scouring-rushes

Primitive plants in the genus Equisetum, lacking true leaves

Key characteristics

Horsetails and scouring-rushes are primitive, spindly-looking plants, often growing in moist places, which reproduce by spores aggregated into a spore cone at the top of the stem. Whorls of tiny, teeth-like leaves occur at the top of the sheath and are found at each node. Note the color and number of teeth on the top of the leaves that make up the sheath. Note whether there are whorls of branches on the main stem, and whether the main stem is hollow. Sometimes spore cones are produced on separate, un-branched stems.

Exceptions

Some horsetails can be very small with unusually curly stems. Look at several plants to be sure whether all stems are un-branched or not.

Video about this subgroup

Horsetails, scouring-rushes

My plant isn't in these subgroups.

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