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Soft Tree Fern

Dicksonia antartica

Photo by arlanda
Published on Project Noah
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40.3935, -3.70016

Field Notes

Description:

Life and Mathematics. This is a very nice example of fractal shape (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractal). The same motif is repeated at different scales "ad infinitum". It has also a nice glide reflection symmetry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glide_reflection) by the way the leaves and twigs are distributed.

These ferns typically grow to about 4.5-5 m, and consist of an erect rhizome forming a trunk. They are very hairy at the base of the stipe (trunk). The large, dark green, roughly-textured fronds spread in a canopy of 2-6 m in diameter. The shapes of the stems vary as some grow curved and there are multi-headed ones. The fronds are borne in flushes, with fertile and sterile fronds often in alternating layers.

Habitat:

Dicksonia antarctica, known as the Soft Tree Fern, Man Fern or Tasmanian Tree Fern, is an evergreen tree fern native to parts of Australia, namely south-east Queensland, coastal New South Wales and Victoria and Tasmania.
This specimen was spotted at the Invernadero del Palacio de Cristal de la Arganzuela, Madrid

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