Phegopteris hexagonoptera

Broad beech fern
Phegopteris hexagonoptera in spring

Secure (NatureServe)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Division: Polypodiophyta
Class: Polypodiopsida
Order: Polypodiales
Suborder: Aspleniineae
Family: Thelypteridaceae
Genus: Phegopteris
Species:
P. hexagonoptera
Binomial name
Phegopteris hexagonoptera
Distribution
Synonyms

Dryopteris hexagonoptera (Michx.) C. Chr.
Thelypteris hexagonoptera (Michx.) Weath.

Phegopteris hexagonoptera, commonly called the broad beech fern, is a common herbacious perennial forest fern native to the eastern United States and adjacent Ontario. It grows from a creeping rootstock, sending up individual fronds that more or less clump. Its native habitat includes moist, undisturbed, hardwood forests.

The fronds are broadly triangular. The specific epithet hexagonoptera, Latin for "six-sided wing", refers to the wings of leaf tissue along the rachis between the basal pinnae.

Sori are small, round, and naked. This aspect of the plant has caused it in the past to be placed, at first, in the genus Polypodium, then grouped with genus Dryopteris, then with the genus Thelypteris. Genetic analysis has shown the genus Phegopteris to be a sister clade to the rest of the thelypteroid ferns.

This fern makes an excellent garden plant, gradually filling in a bed.