The origin and development of the New Zealand Asplenium flora is briefly discussed. It has its closest affinities with that of temperate Australia from where most of the species have probably been derived. However, some species such as A. trichomanes, A. polyodon, and A. obtusatum have affinities with Northern Hemisphere, tropical, or South American floras and have therefore ultimately reached New Zealand from much further afield.
The genus displays a higher mean level of ploidy (5.9) in this country than in any other area for which records exist; of the 18 sexually reproducing cytotypes, 9 are tetraploid, 1 is hexaploid, and 8 are octoploid. Most of the tetraploid species have distributions extending outside New Zealand and they are therefore considered ancestral. The higher polypoids are almost all endemic and are thought to have originated within New Zealand from the tetraploid taxa.
Received 16 August 1976
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (4738K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)