climbing fern การใช้
- Some species of Stenochlaena are common as climbing ferns in South-East Asian rainforests.
- Climbing ferns overtake cypress trees in the Everglades.
- One odd group of vining plants is the fern genus " Lygodium ", called climbing ferns.
- Another exotic pest, the Old World climbing fern, makes fires more damaging by helping them spread to treetops.
- This plant is a long-climbing fern with thin black scales and stems that can reach up to 20 m.
- The vine was the Old World climbing fern, rapidly gaining a reputation as a menace to South Florida's environment.
- Old World climbing fern ( " Lygodium microphyllum " ) infests cypress swamps and other hydric sites, forming a monoculture.
- The same can be said for other members of the cissus clan, as well as for mandevillas, ivies, asparagus vines and climbing ferns.
- The species that is causing the most impediment to restoration is the Old World climbing fern ( " Lygodium microphyllum " ), introduced in 1965.
- The next few steps would have to be tunnelled through climbing fern, and then more orchids on trees with moisture continuously dripping off fringes of moss.
- Climbing fern, celestial lily and a rare orchid named Habaneria odontopetala grow fairly abundantly here, along with the common Desmodium-stick-tights that love to hitch a ride on your trouser-legs.
- Several ferns are noxious weeds or invasive species, including Japanese climbing fern ( " Lygodium japonicum " ), mosquito fern and sensitive fern ( " Onoclea sensibilis " ).
- Biologists also are alarmed by the rise of a relatively new invader : the Old World climbing fern, a vinelike weed that swarms over cypress and even creeps over sawgrass.
- The Old World climbing fern ( " Lygodium microphyllum " ) may be causing the most harm to restoration as it blankets areas thickly, making it impossible for animals to pass through.
- An introduced species in North America, Japanese climbing fern was first recorded as being established in toothed midsorus fern ( " Blechnum serrulatum " ) indicates the likely presence of this species.
- ""'Lygodium " "'( "'climbing fern "') is a genus of about 40 species of ferns, native to tropical regions across the world, with a few temperate species in eastern Asia and eastern North America.
- Japanese climbing fern ( " Lygodium japonicum " ) was added to the Florida Noxious Weed List in 1999 . It is also a major problem in pine plantations, causing contamination and harvesting problems for the pine straw industry.
- She said a more long-term concern is that the combination of wind and rain could have contributed to the spread of two species of exotic climbing ferns that can cover forest canopy, killing trees and increasing the fire hazard.
- Many ferns only grow within specific pH ranges; for instance, the climbing fern ( " Lygodium palmatum " ) of eastern North America will only grow in moist, intensely acid soils, while the bulblet bladder fern ( " Cystopteris bulbifera " ), with an overlapping range, is only found on limestone.
- Thousands of exotic plant species have been observed in South Florida, usually introduced as ornamental landscaping, but park staff must eradicate such invasive plants as melaleuca tree ( " Melaleuca quinquenervia " ), Brazilian pepper ( " Schinus terebinthifolius " ), and Old World climbing fern ( " Lygodium microphyllum " ).