It is a small fern with
pinnate fronds, growing in erect tufts, with a shiny black
stipe and
rachis (stem and leaf axis). Sterile and fertile fronds are similar in appearance. The roots are thin and wiry and do not proliferate to form new plants. The
rhizome is short and erect, about in diameter. It has variously been described as sometimes branching or unbranched. It bears stiff filamentous, linear, or lance-shaped scales, which are blackish in color and obscurely clathrate (bearing a lattice-like pattern) or entirely black. The scales are long and wide, with untoothed, often brown, margins and long, drawn-out tips. Leaves are erect and borne in dense clumps, varying in size from long and from wide. The stipe (the stalk of the leaf, below the blade) is straight and stiff and a glossy black to purplish-black in color. It may be smooth or bear scattered blackish-brown, threadlike scales long and tan, club-shaped hairs long which are appressed (lie flat against the stipe). The stipe measures long (rarely as long as ), and comprises one-tenth to one-quarter or one-third of the length of the blade. It is round in cross-section but slightly flattened
adaxially and has indistinct
wings on either side, or lacks them entirely. The leaf blade is linear in shape, sometimes slightly wider below the tip or just above the base. It measures from long and from wide, sometimes as wide as . It abruptly converges to a lobed, pointed tip and gradually tapers at its base. Unlike the related Palmer's spleenwort (
A. palmeri), it does not form proliferating buds at the tip; however, the pinnatifid is often deciduous, leaving behind a naked rachis. The blade is hairless or bears scattered club-shaped hairs, long, beneath. The leaf tissue is often bluish-green and thick in texture, not quite leathery. The rachis, like the stipe, is rounded, blackish and shiny; it may be smooth or have a few of the tan hairs found on the stipe. The winging of the stipe extends up the rachis; it is variously described as taking the form of parallel, cartilaginous ribs, with a narrow, green, leafy wing, the ribs fusing into a wing towards the tip of the leaf, or a whitish to tan wing similar in dimensions to that of the stipe. The blade is cut into pinnae throughout its length, from 20 to 40 pairs per leaf. The pinnae are
sessile (stalkless) or have minute stalks and are rectangular in shape, tapering slightly toward the tip. In North American and Mexican material, those in the middle of the leaf blade measure from in length (rarely as small as ) and from in width. In Guatemalan material, the pinnae typically measured from in length and from in width, the ratio of length to breadth being typically 1.5 to 2.5. Each pinna usually has an
auricle at its base, pointing towards the tip of the blade; occasionally auricles pointing towards the base of the blade are also present. The edges of the pinnae are untoothed or have shallowly
rounded teeth (or deep, rounded teeth in exceptional shade-grown specimens), and are often rolled under. The tips of the pinnae are blunt. The lower pinnae are widely spaced on the rachis, and reflexed downwards. Leaf veins are free (they do not rejoin one another) and are difficult to see; fertile veins are once-forking and do not terminate in
hydathodes (prominent swellings). Fertile pinnae bear 2 to 6 pairs of
sori (rarely as few as 1 pair or as many as 10), about in length, on both sides of the midrib; the sori are crowded at the edges and often merge as they age. The
indusia covering them are from long (rarely to ) and from wide, greenish or pale yellowish to whitish in color and opaque, with straight or slightly jagged edges. They are persistent after the spores mature, but may be hidden by the full
sporangia.
A. resiliens has a
chromosome number of
n = 2
n = 108 and produces 32 unreduced, round or egg-shaped spores per sporangium.
Similar species A. resiliens resembles several of its congeners; in particular, it belongs to a group comprising varicolored spleenwort (
A. heterochroum),
A. nesioticum, and
A. palmeri, as well as
A. resiliens. The members of this group all share dark, lustrous stipes and lack prominent hydathodes on the surface of the blade, the latter characteristic distinguishing them from single-sorus spleenwort (
A. monanthes) and others. Among the group,
A. resiliens has a slightly more leathery leaf texture than the rest, lacks distinct teeth on the pinna margins, and tends to have once-forked, rather than simple, fertile veins. Stolze noted that specimens with leaf texture so thick as to obscure the veins may be identified as
A. resiliens, as
A. heterochroum and
A. palmeri very rarely become this leathery. In the more temperate parts of its range,
A. resiliens may be confused with ebony spleenwort (
A. platyneuron) and maidenhair spleenwort (
A. trichomanes). Its stipe and rachis are darker and its pinnae smaller and more rounded than that of
A. platyneuron, which also displays
frond dimorphism with prostrate sterile fronds. The pinnae of
A. resiliens are more widely spaced than those of
A. trichomanes, which also lack the upward-pointing auricle, the texture of the leaf tissue is more leathery, and the stipe darker. A hybrid between
A. resiliens and
A. heterochroum, Morzenti's spleenwort (
A. heteroresiliens), is found in Florida and the Carolinas. As
A. resiliens is
triploid and
A. heterochroum is
tetraploid, the hybrid is
pentaploid and reproduces
apogamously. The hybrid is difficult to distinguish from the parental species, being intermediate in morphology; its fertile veins are sometimes less forked than in
A. resiliens, its leaves tend to have more toothed edges, and it bears misshapen sterile spores together with large, globose, unreduced spores. In
A. resiliens, the sori are close to the pinna margin; in
A. heteroresiliens, they are slightly closer to the margin than to the costa. ==Taxonomy==