Abstract

Field and morphological observations were made of the young sporophytes of rheophyticOsmunda lancea and its related drylandO. japonica, and the rheophyte's adaptation in the early sporophytic stages was discussed. Mature plants ofO. lancea andO. japonica do not occur in dryland and rheophytic habitats, respectively, but their very young sporophytes rarely grow there. The young sporophytes ofO. lancea differ considerably from those ofO. japonica in having the relatively short petioles with thin-walled epidermal cells, early lamina partition, cuneate leaf- and pinna-base, oblique (not horizontal) lamina disposition, a fine network of spongy tissue in the 4th and older leaves, and dense epicuticular wax deposits on leaf epidermis. They seem to relate to the flexibility of petioles and the toughness and flood-tolerance of blades, and make the young sporophytes adapted to the rheophytic habitat.Osmunda japonica lacking those characteristics disappears from the rheophytic habitat during the early ontogenetic stages.

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