This   beautiful fern, so abundant in the western Mediterranean, is the   descendant of a tropical Polypodium from Asia, spread over millions of   years throughout Europe and North Africa, when the northern hemisphere   had a tropical climate. Later, when the  weather  cools, some of their descendants became extinct, surviving only   Polypodium cambricum, who took refuge in warm, humid microclimates in   the Mediterranean region. A subsequent  warming  allowed to leave their shelter and settle throughout the western   Mediterranean, arriving in their expansion into the British Isles. Precisely there, in Wales, which in classical Latin was called Cambria, comes the name of Polypodium cambricum. It is a fern with a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 74.
  Vigorous  specimen of Polypodium  cambricum, photographed in the Serra de  Tramuntana of Mallorca Island, where is one of the most common ferns. The   construction of terraces to retain the land on the slopes of the   mountains benefited it greatly, as this is its preferred habitat.
Numerous  specimens of Polypodium cambricum on a wall of a terrace in the Sierra  de Na Bourgeois, close to Palma de Mallorca, with a lush natural  vegetation.
Young  Polypodium cambricum photographed in the extraordinary Parque Natural  de los Alcornocales in the province of Cadiz, growing on rich humus  formed by  decomposed leaves of old cork oak, Quercus suber. The fronds of Polypodium cambricum can reach a length greater than 50 cms. The  lamina is greater than the petiole and has a form of ovate-oblong to   ovate-triangular, sometimes clearly deltoidea, with pinnae usually   attenuated at the apex and edge subentire or serrulated, the basal pair  reflex in another plane, as can be seen in the largest frond of specimen of the photo.
Old  Polypodium  cambricum photographed at the Natural Park Sierra de  Grazalema, a  true paradise on earth with an extraordinary rich flora  located in  Andalusia. In the frond on the left tell it the characteristic basal pair of pinnae reflex upward.
Vigorous   specimens with fronds over 50 inches growing on a wall in a garden  patch  of the Soller Valley on the Island of Mallorca. This fern also grows as an epiphyte on tree branches in humid environments. In   the summer enters aestivation, its fronds are dried, leaving the   rhizome pending the first autumn rains, then sprouting new fronds.

 Polypodium cambricum, with the exception of the Balearic Islands, share the  habitat with the Polypodium vulgare, an allotetraploid hybrid fern of  Asian origin, the product of crosses between the Polypodium virginianum and the Polypodium glycirrhiza, which colonized Europe millions years later of Polypodium cambricum. Both ferns were hybridized,  resulting in a triploid sterile hybrid called Polypodium x fontqueri,   which had a mutation in the gene encoding the meiosis, called  apomeiosis  (no meiosis), resulting in triploid spores, which germinate  to generate  triploid gametophytes and these were triploid gametes, which, after fertilization, giving rise to alohexaploid hybrid Polypodium interjectum.

One   of the features which distinguish the Polypodium cambricum  of others  Polypodium is the presence of a filamentous epidermal formations than   trichomes, called paraphyses, which are located in the receptacle of the   sorus of Polypodium cambricum, both in the Mediterranean subspecies as  the Macaronesian. These filaments are much branched, with its length substantially greater than that of the sporangia. Their number in each sorus usually varies between 5 and 10 paraphyses.
Another branched paraphyses typical of Polypodium cambricum sori. Polypodium vulgare and its hybrid Polypodium interjectum paraphyses lacking. We can see by looking a sorus at a microscope, protruding above the sporangia. Its function is unknown.
On   the underside of the pinnae are some mouth-shaped cells, called   stomata, which open or close depending on the degree of humidity, to   prevent or allow the flow of water through transpiration. Its function is similar to human skin pores. The photo shows the odd-shaped cellular structure puzzle, so that each cell fits into neighboring cells. (Double click on the photo to enlarge)
Rhizomes covered with paleae, which protect them from dehydration, sunstroke and frostbite.
Detail of a rhizome of Polypodium cambricum covered by paleae linear-lanceolate, ferruginous, 5 to 16 mm. long. The appearance at first sight recalls the wooliness of muskoxen and mammoths.
Turning to a frond sori are without indusium, distributed in two rows on the underside of each pinna along the midrib.
Double   clicking on the picture to enlarge You can see details of the sori   naked without covering them indusium formed by numerous yellow sporangia   in different stages of maturation, photographed in February.
Detail of sori with mature sporangia, some already deployed, initiating the dispersal of spores in late winter.
Microscopic photograph of a sorus in which by transparency can be seen the spores contained in each of the sporangia. (Double click on the photo to enlarge)
Polypodium cambricum sporangium already deployed after the dispersal of spores. In   the center of the image is the ring of thickened cells, whose number   can vary from a minimum of 4 and a maximum of 18, but generally is   around 7 cells.
And   finally in this microscopic image made at 400 increases are reniform   spores of a color similar to honey with the warty surface or perispore.
 
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