Asplenium ceterach (Ceterach officinarum)
Sintra/Portugal (23/11/2023)
[Nikon D850; AF 105mm Micro-Nikkor F2,8 with Circular Flash Nissin MF 18; 1/250s; F14; 400 ISO]
seen from China
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seen from Ukraine
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seen from United States

seen from Maldives

seen from Italy
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
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seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Russia
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seen from Malaysia
Asplenium ceterach (Ceterach officinarum)
Sintra/Portugal (23/11/2023)
[Nikon D850; AF 105mm Micro-Nikkor F2,8 with Circular Flash Nissin MF 18; 1/250s; F14; 400 ISO]
Asplenium ceterach, syn. Ceterach officinarum, Aspleniaceae
Dry stone walls -as in, walls built by stacking natural stones without the use of mortar- are always a good place to look for interesting species, generally undemanding and very resilient ones. In this case it was a little evergreen fern known as rustyback which caught my attention while I was hill-walking in northern Italy. Native to Europe and Asia, it’s present here in Scotland, but not nearly as common as it is in the rest of the British Isles and Italy due to its preference for a mostly dry and alkaline substrate in full sun, being fully adapted to survive and recover from desiccation. The common name refers to the colour of the hairy inferior page of the fronds, visible in the photos. If you check the bottom one carefully, you will also see a small A. thricomanes, a related and very common fern I’m particularly fond of and which I have already written about. In Italy it has a history as a medicinal plant, having been used mostly to treat bladder and kidney stones and as a diuretic.
Asplenium ceterach (syn. Ceterach officinarum)