Argyrochosma lumholtzii is a small fern. Its
rhizome is compact and upright. It bears
linear or linear-
ligulate (straplike) scales long, long-
acuminate at the tip, somewhat twisted, of a uniform orange-brown or reddish-brown color, with
entire (toothless) margins. The fronds arise in clumps from the rhizome. They are long from the base to the tip of the leaf. Of this length, about two-thirds is made up by the
stipe (the stalk of the leaf, below the blade), which is shiny and round, hairless, and black in color. The leaf blades are
deltate-
lanceolate to deltate-
ovate. They are
bipinnate (cut into pinnae and pinnules), becoming pinnate (but not pinnate-pinntifid) in the upper part of the blade. The
rachis (leaf axis) is round (rather than flattened) straight, and hairless, and is similar to the stipe in color. Each blade bears 6 to 8 pairs of pinnae, which are widely spaced and
alternate to nearly opposite on the rachis. These are divided into pinnules, which are
orbicular (circular) or slightly
oblong to nearly
cordate (heart-shaped), without a clear joint at the stalk; they are widely separated from one another. They are typically across, and have entire margins. The terminal pinnules are deltate. The leaf tissue is gray-green in color, leafy or slightly leathery in texture, and lacks hairs. Unlike many species of
Argyrochosma, the underside of the leaf lacks a coating of
farina (powder). The
sori lie along the veins, in the portions closest to the edge of the leaf, extending over roughly one-third to one-half of the vein. The leaf edges are not modified into false
indusia; they are sometimes, thought not always, slightly curved under. Each
sporangium bears 64 spores, indicating that it is a sexual diploid species. It is most similar to
Argyrochosma jonesii, but can be distinguished from it by its black (rather than brownish) leaf axes, and the bipinnate (rather than bi- to tripinnate) division of the leaf. ==Taxonomy==