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Stenochlaena

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Stenochlaena
Stenochlaena palustris
in West Kalimantan, Indonesia
Scientific classification
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Stenochlaena

Stenochlaena is a genus of ferns of the plant family Blechnaceae. Six species were formally accepted in an April 2013 scientific review of the genus, first written some years earlier and submitted in 2009.[1] One additional species S. hainanensis awaits confirmation of its difference from S. palustris by means of differences in fertile material and/or its formal publication.[1] One additional likely species grows naturally in Cameroon, Africa, recognised with the descriptive name Stenochlaena sp. 'Cameroon' but it awaits formal description.[1]

Some species of Stenochlaena are common as climbing ferns in South-East Asian rainforests. After the end-Cretaceous mass extinction caused by an asteroid impact, a species of Stenochlaena was essentially the only common plant across North America for several thousand years.[citation needed]

Stenochlaena palustris is eaten as a popular vegetable similar to fiddlehead ferns, in Sarawak, where it is known as 'midin' and usually flavored with shrimp paste or garlic cloves. In India[2] and parts of Indonesia. In South Kalimantan it is called kalakai.

Species

Southern India, Indochina, Malaysia, Papuasia, Northern Australia and Southwestern Pacific

Africa and African Islands

References

  1. ^ a b c Chambers, T. Carrick (11 April 2013). "A review of the genus Stenochlaena (Blechnaceae, subfamily Stenochlaenoideae)". Telopea. 15. Mrs Macquaries Road, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia: National Herbarium of New South Wales, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust: 13–36. doi:10.7751/telopea2013004.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  2. ^ Ethnobotanical Leaflets