Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 1, No. 3, September 1928
A Rare Fern From Crater Lake
By F. L. Wynd, Dept. of
Botany, University of Oregon
Crater Lake seems to be an especially
favorable locality for the bizarre and unusual plant life. Besides the
seven new species that Colville found in this region in 1896, he has
since described another. (In Underw. Nat. Ferns ed. 669, 1900). This is
a little fern that grows only on the highest pumice slopes. It really is
not a true fern since the fronds are not circinate in the bud, the
sporangia do not have typical fern's annulus, and the spores are formed
within the tissue of the sporophyll. By these characteristics we place
it in the Adder's Tongue Family (Opheoglossaceae) but still for
all practical purposes we may call it a fern.
Its extreme rarity is evidenced by the
fact that it has been found by collectors only twice. The type specimen
was found a good many years ago, but since then it has "hidden out" on
us completely, with the single exception of a specimen which was
collected this season.
Not only its rarity, but also its
protective coloration aids it in escaping notice. The leaves, or fronds,
are a dull grey color, which blends perfectly with the pumice slopes on
which it grows. This is a fortunate circumstance, since it would soon
become extinct were it at all conspicuous.
Botanists call this plant Botrychium
pumicola, which altho grammatically incorrect as Latin names go,
means "pumice inhabitant."