The
rhizome is short and horizontal, with leaves closely spaced. It bears
linear or linear-
subulate, uniformly colored, brown or reddish-brown scales, sometimes nearly black in color, with
entire (toothless) margins and a thin texture. They are long and wide. The leaves range from long, and arise in clumps. The
stipe (the stalk of the leaf, below the blade) is chestnut brown or reddish-brown to dark brown, rounded and hairless, and in diameter. It is typically long, making up about one-half to two-thirds of the total length of the leaf. The leaf blade is
ovate to
lanceolate, and ranges from
bipinnate (cut into pinnae and pinnules) to tripinnate (with pinnules cut into pinnulets) at the base, where it is most divided. It is not reduced in width at the base. The blade measures from long and wide. The base is
obtuse (blunt), while the tip is
acute (pointed). The
rachis (leaf axis) is rounded or slightly flattened on the upper side, sometimes even shallowly grooved, and dark in color, as are the axes of the leaf segments. The color continues into the base of the leaf segments, without a distinct joint. The axes are straight, rather than zig-zagging. Each blade has 4 to 6 pairs of pinnae, ovate or deltoid-ovate in shape. These are in turn divided into 2 to 3 pairs of
orbicular (circular) or deltoid to ovate pinnules, obtuse at the tip and
cordate (heart-shaped) or
truncate (abruptly terminating) at the base and borne on a short stalk. The ones closest to the blade base may be subdivided into another set of segments, while the pinnules closer to the blade tip are lobed or entire. The leaf tissue is dark blue-green and of a leathery to fleshy texture, obscuring the veins from the upper surface, and does not bear hairs or scales on either surface. Unlike many species in the genus,
farina (powder) is not present on either surface of the leaf. The leaves do not curl when dry. In fertile leaf segments, the
sporangia are close to the margin, borne along the further half of the secondary veins branching from the midrib of the segment. Each
sporangium contains 64
spores. The leaf segments, at most, are slightly curled under, not concealing the sporangia, and their tissue is not modified into a false
indusium.
A. jonesii is a sexual diploid, with a chromosome count of 2
n = 54. A tetraploid
cytotype was thought to exist, but this is believed to be the result of plants occasionally producing 32 diploid (rather than 64 haploid) spores and giving rise to diploid
gametophytes. It is most similar in appearance to the closely related
A. lumholtzii, and both are present in
Sonora, but the latter has a darker leaf stalk and axes and the leaf is less highly divided. ==Taxonomy==