Ferns and Fern Allies of the Red River Gorge (Kentucky)
The Red River Gorge in eastern Kentucky is a canyon system that is part of the Pottsville Escarpment, which forms the eastern border of the Cincinnati Arch, running from Tennessee through Kentucky through southeastern Ohio. At the Red River Gorge, the younger and higher Mississippian strata of the Cumberland Plateau drop to the Devonian and Silurian strata of the Bluegrass. The Mississippian sandstones are hard and well-consolidated, forming long series of high cliffs, often several hundred feet high. Many towers, natural bridges, rockhouses, narrow canyons and waterfalls are to be found in this geologic areas. The Red River Gorge is mostly Federal land within the Daniel Boone National Forest, located in Wolfe, Powell and Menifee Counties, close to Natural Bridge State Park. It has been designated a "geologic" area and has been set aside from logging and other development.
The Gorge has an exceptionally rich range of flora because of its geological extremes which create many local climate zones. Canada yew is found there in close proximity to far more southern species. The fern flora is rich, with many species reaching larger sizes than they customarily do.
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Lycophyta
Class: Lycopsida
Order: Lycopodiales
Lycopodiaceae: the clubmoss family
Genus: Lycopodium
- Lycopodium clavatum: running wolf's-foot
- Occasional, on open, sandy banks.
- Lycopodium obscurum: ground-pine
- Occasional, in high, sandy locations.
Genus: Diphasiastrum
- Diphasiastrum digitatum (aka Lycopodium flabelliforme): ground-cedar, running-cedar
- Frequent, in disturbed areas.
Genus: Huperzia
- Huperzia lucidula (aka Lycopodium lucidulum): shining clubmoss
- Occasional, in moist, acid seeps.
Order: Equisetales
Family: Equisetaceae: the horsetail and scouring-rush family
Genus: Equisetum
- Equisetum hyemale var. affine: scouring-rush
- Occasional, in scattered locations in open, sandy areas by Red River.
Order: Botrychiales
Family: Botrychiaceae: the grape-fern family
Genus: Botrychium
- Botrychium matricariifolium: matricary grape fern
- Rare, in older disturbed areas.
Genus: Sceptridium
- Sceptridium dissectum (aka Botrychium dissectum or B. obliquum): oblique grape fern
- Occasional, in disturbed areas.
Genus: Botrypus
- Botrypus virginiana (aka Japanobotrychium virginianum): rattlesnake fern
- Frequent, in rich woodland borders.
Order: Osmundales
Family: Osmundaceae: the flowering-fern family
Genus: Osmunda
- Osmunda cinnamomea: cinnamon fern
- Frequent, in swampy, acid areas, often occurring with O. regalis.
- Osmunda claytoniana: interrupted fern
- Occasional, in moist hillside pockets.
- Osmunda regalis: royal fern
- Occasional, in swampy, acid areas, often occurring with O. cinnamomea.
Order: Schizaeales
Family: Lygodiaceae: the climbing fern family
Genus: Lygodium
- Lygodium palmatum: Hartford fern or climbing fern
- Occasional, in exposed locations in moist, highly acid, sandy soil.
Order: Pteridales
Family: Adiantaceae: the maidenhair family
Genus: Adiantum
- Adiantum pedatum: maidenhair fern
- Common, in moist, well-drained situations, both in soil and on rock.
Family: Pellaeaceae
Genus: Pellaea
- Pellaea atropurpurea: purple-stemmed cliff-brake
- Rare, known to me only from a few plants in a local limestone exposure on the bank of the Red River upriver from the upper bridge.
Order: Dennstaedtiales
Family: Dennstaedtiaceae: the dennstaedtioid fern family
Genus: Dennstaedtia
- Dennstaedtia punctilobula: hayscented fern
- Common, on open, moist hillsides and low areas.
Order: Hypolepidales
Family: Hypolepidaceae
Genus: Pteridium
- Pteridium latiusculum (aka P. acquilinum var. latiusculum): bracken
- Frequent, in open, upland areas.
Order: Aspleniales
Family: Aspleniaceae: the spleenwort family
Genus: Asplenium
- Asplenium bradleyii: Bradley's spleenwort
- Rare, in acid pockets, usually high up, on weathered sandstone cliffs.
- Asplenium montanum: mountain spleenwort
- Frequent, in acid pockets on weathered sandstone cliffs.
- Asplenium pinnatifidum: pinnatifid spleenwort
- Common, in pockets on weathered sandstone rock.
- Asplenium platyneuron: ebony spleenwort
- Common, usually in meadow areas and disturbed areas.
- Asplenium rhizophyllum (aka Camptosorus rhizophyllus): walking fern
- Rare, in shaded locations on densely mossy rock.
-
Order: Athyriales
Family: Athyriaceae
Genus: Athyrium
- Athyrium asplenioides: southern lady fern
- Frequent, in very wet soils.
Genus: Deparia
- Deparia thelypterioides (aka Athyrium thelypterioides): silvery glade fern
- Common, on low slopes and banks.
Family: Onocleaceae: the bead ferns
Genus: Onoclea
- Onoclea sensibilis: sensitive fern
- Common, in low, open areas.
Blechnaceae: the chain-fern family
Genus: Lorinseria
- Lorinseria areolata: net-vein chain fern
- Rare, known primarily from one seep near the Nada Tunnel.
Thelypteridaceae: the female fern family
Genus: Thelypteris
- Thelypteris noveboracensis: New-York fern
- Common, in most good woodland soils.
Genus: Phegopteris
- Phegopteris hexagonoptera: broad beech fern
- Common, in most good woodland soils.
Order: Dryopteridales
Family: Dryopteridaceae: the dryopteroid fern family
Genus: Dryopteris
- Dryopteris goldiana: Goldie's wood fern
- Occasional, in rich soil on wooded hillsides.
- Dryopteris intermedia: intermediate wood fern
- Common, in sandy, acid, rocky areas.
- Dryopteris marginalis: marginal or evergreen wood fern
- Common, in sandy, acid, rocky areas.
- Polystichum acrostichoides: Christmas fern
- Common, in a wide variety of situations.
Order: Polypodiales
Family: Polypodiaceae: the polypody family
Genus: Polypodium
- Polypodium appalachianum: the Appalachian rock-cap fern
- Polypodium virginianum: the Virginia rock-cap fern
- NOTE: I have not had an opportunity to examine these populations in order to ascertain which species is/are present, but I'm assuming that they're both present. In any case, in aggregate, they are common, on the tops of sandstone rock in shaded locations.
Top of Page