Ceratopteris thalictroides is often found near stagnant water or in still pockets along slow flowing rivers in swampy areas, swamp forests,
sago swamps, marshes, natural and man-made ponds. The plant thrives in full sun to moderate shade, from sea level to altitude, but mostly below .
C. thalictroides is often massed on or around logs or other floating vegetation. The plant was once recorded in a fresh-water
mangrove (
Sonneratia) growing among the finger-like
pneumatophores. In some areas,
Ceratopteris exhibits a degree of seasonality, reaching maturity and shedding spores during the dry season; plants have lost nearly all sterile fronds by this stage. ==Uses==