An easy to grow large upright fern. Interrupted fern gets its name from the brown fertile pinnae, which "interrupt" the green sterile leaflets on the larger fronds.
Pronunciation
(os-MUN-duh)
Plant Type
All Plants, Ferns - Hardy
Hardiness Zone
2-8
Sunlight
part sun
Moisture
moist
Soil & Site
Naturally occurs in moist woods. Prefers acidic moist soils but tolerant of most soils.
Temperature
Leaves wither early after a frost.
Flowers
Ferns do not produce flowers. They were around prior to the evolution of the flowering plants (angiosperms). This fern produces its spores in the center of a fertile frond. These fertile pinnae interrupt the frond.
Leaves
The frond is pinnate-pinnatifid. The fertile frond is interrupted in the middle with the fertile pinnae. On top of this section and below are vegetative pinnae.
Stems
Rhizome is compact and horizontal forming a stubby mass of black old stems at the base of the plant.
Dimensions
Reaches 2-4 feet.
Propagation
spores
Author's Notes
Given the proper site I have found this an easy fern to grow.
Notes & Reference
#80-A Field Guide to Ferns (Boughton Cobb), #90-Ferns for American Gardens (John T Mickel)