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Claytosmunda

Claytosmunda is a genus of fern. It has only one extant species, Claytosmunda claytoniana, the interrupted fern, native to Eastern Asia, Eastern United States, and Eastern Canada.

Description
Claytosmunda claytoniana fronds are bipinnate, tall and broad, the blade formed of alternate segments forming an arching blade tightening to a pointed end. The lower end is also slightly thinner than the rest of the frond because the first segments are shorter. Three to seven short, cinnamon-colored fertile segments are inserted in the middle of the length, giving the plant its name. In their absence, the plant in all its stages appears similar to Osmundastrum cinnamomeum (cinnamon fern). The base of the segments distinguishes the two species: where O. cinnamomeum has typical felt-like hairs, the few hairs present on C. claytoniana are extremely short, usually requiring a magnifying glass to see well. Like other species in the family Osmundaceae, it grows a very large rhizome, with persistent stipe bases from previous years. It forms small, dense colonies, spreading locally through its rhizome, and often forming fairy rings. ==Taxonomy==
Taxonomy
The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753, as Osmunda claytoniana. • †C. beardmorensis (J.M.Schopf, 1978) (Middle Triassic: East Antarctica). • †C. chengii Blomfleur et al. 2017 (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. johnstonii (Tidwell, Munzing & M.R.Banks, 1991) (?Early Jurassic: Tasmania, Australia). • †C. embreii (Stockey & S.Y.Sm., 2000) (Early Cretaceous: California, USA). • †C. liaoningensis (Wu Zhang & Shao-Lin Zheng, 1991) (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. nathorstii (C.N.Mill., 1967) (Palaeogene: Svalbard). • †C. plumites (N.Tian & Y.D.Wang 2014[a]) (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. preosmunda (Y.M.Cheng, Yu F.Wang & C.S.Li, 2007) (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. sinica (Y.M.Cheng & C.S.Li, 2007) (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. tekelili (E.I.Vera, 2012) (Early Cretaceous: West Antarctica). • †C. wangii (N.Tian & Y.D.Wang, 2014[b]) (Middle Jurassic: Liaoning, China). • †C. wehrii (C.N.Mill., 1982) (Miocene: Washington, USA). • †C. zhangiana Tian et al, 2021. (Middle Jurassic, Liaoning, China) ==Distribution==
Distribution
North America In eastern North America it occurs in: the Great Lakes region; eastern Canada – in southern Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec (north to tree line); and east to Newfoundland; eastern United States – upper New England south through the Appalachian Mountains and Atlantic seaboard, into the Southeastern United States in Georgia and Alabama; and west across the Southern United States to Mississippi River, and back up the Mississippi embayment through the Midwestern United States to the Great Lakes. Asia In eastern Asia, the fern is found in the subtropical and temperate Asia in: the Eastern Himalaya, South Central China and Eastern China, Taiwan, the Korean Peninsula, the Ryukyu Islands, and Japan. Ecology Claytosmunda claytoniana is found in humid zones, mostly in forests, but also in more open habitats and biomes, although rarely in bogs. The interrupted fern is often found alongside ostrich, cinnamon, and sensitive ferns. Hybrids Osmunda × ruggii, is a hybrid between C. claytoniana and O. spectabilis (American royal fern). The hybrid is considered important because it suggests a closer genetic relationship between C. claytoniana and O. spectabilis than between C. claytoniana and O. cinnamomeum (a fact which has led to moving O. cinnamomeum out of Osmunda and into its own genus Osmundastrum). Osmunda × ruggii is sterile and is known from only about two natural populations, despite the many areas in which both C. claytoniana and O. spectabilis are found. ==Uses==
Uses
Medicinal The Iroquois used the plant as treatment for blood disorders and venereal diseases. ==References==
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