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IntroductionEnglish: Clubmosses.
Clades:
Lycopodiales;
Lycopodiidae;
Lycopodianae; Pterodophya;
Plants.
Members: 1 genus, Phlegmarius; 300 species.
Region: pantropical.
Habitat: tropical forest; epiphytic.
Plant theoryPhlegmarioideae is new family in the
Plant theory. It is split off from
Huperziaceae as Field has shown. Phlegmarius is a big genus and is mostly tropical. This fits with
Subphase 5. In analysis it is shown to consist of two subgroups. This can indicate that it has to be further split, for instance in
Phlegmarioideae and
Phlegmarioideae2.
BotanyFern; epiphytic.
Root: adventitious; emergence cortical.
Stem: protostelic; shoots isotomous, arising in a tuft; growth axis horizontal, dorsiventral; fertile shoots sessile; stele < stem diameter.
Leaves: eligulate; sporophylls pelate, deciduous; sporangial stalk present; sporophylls paleate, evergreen; mucilage duct in sporophyll absent.
Sporangia: sporangial wall cells thin, non-lignified, sinuate.
Reproduction: gametophyte subterrenean, germinate in the dark; gametophyte with paraphyses.
Spore: homosporous.
Spore: margins convex.
Bulbils absent.
Essence, tentativeThe conflict is between being oneself and able to survive on the one hand and finding a place in the community on the other hand. It is the transition of childhood to adulthood and having to become someone in the community.
The situation is that of a child, alone in the world, without a home, having to survive among adults. This makes them timid and shy towards stronger and bigger adults. But on the other hand they can be domineering and aggressive to weaker persons in order to get what they need to survive.
MindAnxious, shy, timid.
Timid towards superiors, bossy towards inferiors.
Fear: crowds, people; aggression.
Stages Remediesx
Phlegmariurus phlegmaria