Hybridization and polyploidy are common phenomena in ferns, and the genus Dryopteris is known to be one of the most freely-hybridizing fern genera. North American botanists recognized early that there were close relationships between many of the species of Dryopteris on the continent, and that these relationships reflected hybrid ancestry. The complex includes six sexual diploid parents (one of which, "D. semicristata", is hypothesized to be extinct), six sexual allopolyploids, and numerous sterile hybrids at various ploidal levels.
Diploid species
Allopolyploid species
Other hybrids
- Dryopteris ÃÂ australis (D. celsa ÃÂ D. ludoviciana; triploid)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ bootii (D. cristata ÃÂ D. intermedia; triploid)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ critica (D. borreri ÃÂ D. filix-mas)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ complexa aggregate (D. filix-mas and D. affinis; tetraploid)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ convoluta (D. cambrensis ÃÂ D. filix-mas)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ deweveri (D. dilatata ÃÂ D. carthusiana)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ neo-wherryi (D. goldieana ÃÂ D. marginalis; diploid)
- Dryopteris ÃÂ triploidea (D. carthusiana ÃÂ D. intermedia; triploid)
References