Skip to main content

Possible online services disruption due to Internet related outage

A worldwide technology outage is causing disruption to some State of Illinois online systems.  We are aware of this issue and are diligently working on restoration.

Attention hunters: Visit our FAQ page for information about the use of centerfire, single-shot rifles for deer hunting in Illinois. 

netted chain-fern

netted chain-fern (Woodwardia areolata)
Photo © Christopher David Benda

Features and Behaviors

FEATURES
The netted chain-fern is an upright plant with leaves about 24 inches long and six inches wide. Each green leaf is divided into 10 or more pairs of leaflets. The leaflet is thin, sharp-pointed and has a wavy margin. The third pair of leaflets from the base of the leaf is usually the longest. The rachis is green-brown and slightly scaly. The stipe is longer than the leaf. It is yellow-green above and red-brown at the base with a few scales.

BEHAVIORS
The netted chain-fern may be found in Johnson and Pope counties in Illinois. It grows in marshy areas in lowland woods and on sandstone cliffs. Spores are produced from July through October.

Illinois Range

Taxonomy

​Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pteridophyta
Class: Filicopsida
Order: Polypodiales
Family: Blechnaceae

Illinois Status: common, native