(1862) The trunk is black and covered with distinctive hexagonal
stipe bases. The
fronds may be up to long, and arch upwards from the crown. Dead fronds are shed except in very young plants. The primary
pinnae are from to long, and the undersides have scales with spines along their margins. As many as 40,000 leaflets have been counted on a single frond. The stipes are thick, black, very rough to the touch, and are similarly covered in black scales with marginal spines.
Sphaeropteris medullaris can be readily distinguished from related species by the hexagonal stipe scars on the trunk, and by the scales with spines on their margins. Fully grown trees can reach a height of , making the species the tallest tree fern found in New Zealand.
Sphaeropteris medullaris is one of the fastest growing tree ferns alongside
Sphaeropteris excelsa, with both species growing as much as a year. The tree produces a red
mucilage when the trunk is cut, which is a
non-Newtonian fluid. ==Taxonomy and etymology==