Diplopterygium pinnatum & Dicranopteris linearis
Descrission:
Two members of the Forked fern family (Gleicheniaceae) growing together in a Hawaiian forest. Upper center & left: Uluhe lau nui* (Diplopterygium pinnatum)Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (All main islands except Niihau & Kahoolawe)Lower center & right: Uluhe (Dicranopteris linearis)Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (All main islands except Niihau & Kahoolawe) www.flickr.com/photos/dweickhoff/14002480298/in/photolist...Photo: Kaala Natural Area Reserve, OahuMedicinally, early Hawaiians used the juice of uluhe as a laxative for constipation.Fronds were, and still are, used in lei making._____* The name in Hawaiian is translated as "lau," leaf, and "nui" large, literally: large-leaved uluhe.
Ancludù an coste pàgine-sì:
- Life
- Cellular
- Eukaryota
- Archaeplastida
- Chloroplastida
- Streptophyta
- Embryophytes
- Tracheophyta
- Polypodiopsida
- Gleicheniales
- Gleicheniaceae
- Diplopterygium
- Diplopterygium pinnatum
Costa plancia a compariss an gnun-e colession.
Anformassion an sla sorgiss
- licensa
- cc-by-nc-sa
- drit d'autor
- David Eickhoff
- fotògraf
- David Eickhoff
- original
- archivi ëd mojen original
- visité la sorgiss
- sit compagn
- Flickr Group
- ID