Asplenium Nigripes -

Found primarily in high-elevation regions, typically between 900m and 1,700m. 🧬 Botanical Note

The leaves have a slightly thickened, succulent-like feel, an adaptation for its rocky habitat. 🗺️ Habitat & Distribution Native Range: Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Cuba.

The fronds are undivided and rhomboid or suborbicular (roundish), which is unusual for the Asplenium genus. asplenium nigripes

Prefers humid, seasonally dry tropical biomes and often grows directly on rock faces (epilithic) in mountain forests.

Asplenium nigripes (formerly Schaffneria nigripes ) is a rare and unique fern native to Mexico, Cuba, and Central America. Unlike many spleenworts with divided leaves, this species features simple, fleshy, heart-shaped or round blades that grow on distinctive black stems. It is often found growing on shaded limestone rocks in mountain forests at elevations between 900 and 1,500 meters. 🌿 Key Features The fronds are undivided and rhomboid or suborbicular

Spore clusters (sori) are paired and open toward each other, a pattern sometimes called "scolopendrioid."

For many years, this plant was the only species in the genus Schaffneria . Recent DNA studies by institutions like the Missouri Botanical Garden and Kew Science have reclassified it into the larger Asplenium family, where it is closely related to the hairy-leaved Asplenium pumilum . Are you interested in this fern at home, or The Cutting Edge - Costa Rica - Missouri Botanical Garden Unlike many spleenworts with divided leaves, this species

Known for its strikingly dark, glossy petioles (stems) that contrast with its bright green leaves.