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tiger_lily_sc

Resurrection fern

Tiger_lily_sc
21 years ago

Hi,

Just wondering if anyone has ever tried Resurrection fern. Latin name? I dunno, but it's the fern that lives on the bark in trees (mostly oaks) that shrivels up to nothing during dry weather and miraculously comes out with rain. It's easy to get if you live in an area with old oaks, just wait for a wind storm. It's a beautiful fern and certainly wouldn't outgrown it's space as it would only live on the bark.

Penny in SC

Comments (19)

  • paul_
    21 years ago

    Hmmm,
    I could be wrong, but I thought I remembered reading -- a long time ago -- that those "resurrection ferns" are not really alive. That they are, in fact, the dried remains of a plant that simply swell like a sponge upon absorbing moisture.

    I'll have to pop back and see what all turns up here -- I'm curious.

  • ubiquity
    21 years ago

    if it's dead when it flufs back up it sure doesn't look like it! i've got a couple of sizable pieces out by my waterfeature that only look good after a substantial rain,but when that condition is met,there's no way anyone could convince me that it's not alive.

    ..now on the other hand,sphagnum takes on an algae that can fool you into believing that lazarus has come forth,but that suckers long long gone! LOL

  • Tiger_lily_sc
    Original Author
    21 years ago

    Paul got my curiosity up so I did a search and here's a link. They are alive but certainly look dead in a drought. They are beautiful! By searching, I found out there's lots of species but the one on the link is the only one I'm familiar with. Thanks, Paul. I learned something!!

    TigerLily aka Penny

    Here is a link that might be useful: Resurrection fern

  • ooojen
    21 years ago

    Yeah, I've got a nice chunk of the stuff, too! Some thoughtful sweetie (with a couple sizable pieces by his water feature) shared with me :) I left it outside until fall, then brought it in under glass (well, plastic, really) under lights. When it started to lose leaves in spite of the humidity, I figured it was dormancy time & put it in the garage for a few weeks. Now it's back in the house, making a return to spring with tiny new green fronds. I'm not certain whether it needed a dormancy period, but it seemed to do the plant good.

    BTW, Jon, I had sphagum pull a Lazarus act & try to take over a rooting case; no mere algae coating, but the real thing. I finally figured it must've had viable spores in the with the dead moss.

  • ubiquity
    21 years ago

    and you still have some? ***batting eyelashes***

  • paul_
    21 years ago

    Well that was interesting!

    Btw how fast does the plant grow?

    Oh Jon I definitely have some very alive moss that grew out of some dead stuff. Ooojen -- spores are the answer. Amazing how long they can remain viable.

    Paul

  • ooojen
    21 years ago

    Sadly, Jon, I let it dry out, but for you, I'll find some more ;)

  • ooojen
    21 years ago

    I was going to mention-- I think I know what you were thinking of about the dead stuff, Paul. Resurrection fern is also the common name of a Selaginella sp. that curls up like a ball when it's dry & unfurls when it's moist. I think they can only do the cycle a few times before they die, and you're right that the ones you find for sale are very likely to already be dead.

  • oppelousas
    20 years ago

    Does anyone know where I can get some of this Resurrection fern? I sure would like to have some. I am also looking for some Spanish moss too.
    Thanks,
    oppelousas

  • ooojen
    20 years ago

    eBay might have what you want. I've been very happy with Tillandsias I got from the seller "rarearthgallery" and I know they sometimes sell res. ferns and Spanish moss. I don't think they have any up right now, but if you check back, they'll probably have them sometime soon. (Or you might check another seller; I just had good luck with the plants I got from that particular one.)

  • Polypodium
    20 years ago

    The Resurrection Ferns scientific name is Polypodium polypodioides. I have been going out of my way for six years to accommodate this fern in a terrarium. I have found that it grows well on a substrate of sphagnum and fir bark. It needs high humidity and air movement.

    The selaginella mentioned above is not Polypodium polypodioides and is definitely not an epiphyte that grows on oak trees.
    And the green suff that can be bought at Lowes and Home Depot known as air fern is really a seaweed and not a fern.

  • ooojen
    20 years ago

    I thought my post was clear, but I guess maybe not. I wasn't suggesting that the Selaginella (S. lepidophylla) was the same thing as the Polypodium polypodioides, just that they share their common name (and properties of hydrochasia).

  • lacampor
    20 years ago

    Jackson and Perkins also sells it cheaply. Go to CatalogCity.com and then search for Resurrection. I just bought eight of them and I'm planning to stick them in sphagnum moss on the trunk of a Juniper "cave" I made. I already have several other tree trunk growing ferns in there, doing well after seven years. On the sphagnum moss, I've had it regrow, but the slightest dryness kills it completely. We get Santana winds here, and it always does in my Oregon/Washington live mosses even when I'm out there wetting them every couple of hours. You can get live sphagnum moss, and spanish moss on ebay at very reasonable prices. The Spanish moss does best, but the birds slowly take it all to make nests............arghhhh.......

  • homer_zn5
    20 years ago

    I have a nice piece of the Polypodium growing in my terrarium (I've had it for about a year now). It is slowly spreading, and it looks great.

    I tried placing this in a few areas of my terrarium, mounting it on the back wall, placing it in the substrate . . etc. (I had a 1 foot x 1 foot piece to cut up and play with, and I sent most of it to another GW member in a more southern zone). I found that the pieces on the back wall just weren't getting enough moisture (even at 80% + humidity and daily misting). However, the piece that was placed on top of the substrate by my waterfall (constantly moist) is thriving.

    My substrate is a mix of 1/4 and 1/2 inch coco husk chips mixed with about 10% activated charcoal. An interesting note: the old pieces of bark/fern roots are now (8 months later) sprouting another type of fern. It's too young to identify yet, but we'll see if it is the Polyploides or another genus/species.

  • jenniebutterfly
    20 years ago

    i had a resurrection fern for about 5 months till i got rid of my fishtank, i had it floating around there for a while. what i have heard about them is that they can go dormant for about 50 years. then when it rains they will come back to life. i looked at pictures of the names you are all mentioning, but did not see the one i had. the fern i had when dry was shaped kinda like an egg, and when resurrected it was opened up like a plate. it also went from very yucky brown to a lush beautiful green, and i must have let it get wet and dry out about 100 times jsut to prove to people how it would work. i don't know how you would incorporate it into a terrarium, but i bet it would look really nice in there :) jennie

  • ara133
    19 years ago

    I'm posting this a bit late, so don't know if anyone will see it, however you can buy the resurrection fern at www.insectlore.com (they call it dinosaur plant, I think). I got some a while ago, it opened up and was all green... and then I accidentally let it dry up too soon I think, and it is now brownish-yellow. I'm 99% sure it was my fault, not a problem with the plant.

  • ara133
    19 years ago

    Nevermind - I was thinking of a different plant! Selaginella Lepidophylla. Sorry!!!

  • dougmach
    19 years ago

    i live in louisiana and have researched the history of the resurrection fern and posted it on my son's web site, if you would like more information, it also has the legend of the spanish moss, very interesting
    www.speed-demons.com/michael.html

    Here is a link that might be useful: resurrection fern/spanish moss history/legend

  • tropichris
    14 years ago

    I grow this plant as an epiphyte in my terrarium. I grow it in a fairly dark spot that stays moist (most of the time) in a 'groove' I cut into the background. I wrap it in sphagnum moss, and it's fronds are unfurled most of the time. So far, rot hasnt been a problem for me.

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