Common Name: Japanese climbing fern
Family: Schizaeaceae
Common Synonyms: none
USDA Hardiness Zone: 8a-11
Growth Habit: Vine (Fern)
Origin: Eastern Asia, temperate to tropical
FISC Category: 1
FDACS Listed Noxious Weed: Yes
Introduction Date: 1930's
IFAS Assessment:
Perennial vine-like fern reaching up to 27 m in length. Fronds are compound and have indeterminate growth, reaching lengths of over 6 m. Stems are green, orange, or black and wiry, forming dense mats. Leafy branches (pinnae) from the main rachis are triangular in shape, 10-20 cm long. Leaflets lobed, stalked, with terminal lobes dissected, pubescent below. Fertile leaflets are contracted in shape and have two rows of sporangia along the inrolled leaf margin.
Upland hardwood forest, floodplain forest, flatwoods, upland pine, swamps, marshes, slope forest, wet prairie, baygall, disturbed areas
Smothers native vegetation, especially tree seedlings. Similar to Old World climbing fern (Lygodium microphyllum), which has unlobed leaflets that are glabrous below.
NA
Dave's Garden. 2014. PlantFiles: Japanese climbing fern, Lygodium japonicum. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/32029/. Accessed on June 23, 2014.
Langeland, K.A., H.M. Cherry, C.M. McCormick, K.C. Burks. 2008. Identification and Biology of Non-Native Plants in Florida's Natural Areas-Second Edition. IFAS Publication SP 257. University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Langeland, K.A., J.A. Ferrell, B. Sellers, G.E. MacDonald, and R.K. Stocker. 2011. Integrated management of non-native plants in natural areas of Florida. EDIS publication SP 242. University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.