The genus Didymoglossum comprises about 30 species of small, generally tropical Ferns growing as epiphytes (i.e. on other Plants) or epiliths (on rocks). Roughly half of the described species come from the Old World, with eight species from tropical Asia. Five species of Didymoglossum are known from India, five from China, one from Vietnam, four from the Solomon Islands, and six from Malesia (Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, and western Indonesia). These Ferns, and possibly other, undescribed species, are likely to also be found in the nations between these documented areas, though as yet few, if any, studies have been carried out in these countries.
In a paper published in the journal PhytoKeys on 6 August 2025, Siwakorn Chokrassameehirun of the Department of Horticulture at Kasetsart University, Ekaphan Kraichak of the Department of Botany and Biodiversity Center at Kasetsart University, and Tassanai Jaruwattanaphan, also of the Department of Horticulture and Biodiversity Center at Kasetsart University, present a study of the genus Didymoglossum in which they describe a new species, as well as documenting other species in the country for the first time.
The new species is described from specimens collected in Hala–Bala Wildlife Sanctuary in Waeng District in the far south of Peninsula Thailand, close to the border with Malaysia. The species is named Didymoglossum radiatum, in reference to the false veinlets on the fronds of the Fern, which form a radiating pattern.
Didymoglossum radiatum can be epiphytic or epilithic in nature, with a long, creeping rhizome 0.2-0.3 mm in diameter firmly anchored to the surface over which it grows by numerous dark brown hairs. It produces plate-like fronds 1.0-1.5 mm in diameter, with dense brown hairs around the rims. Each frond typically bears a single sori (spore-producing body).
Chokrassameehirun et al. also record the presence of two species of Didymoglossum in Thailand for the first time.
The first of these is Didymoglossum henzaianum, a species which grows on rocks close to streams, which was first described from Myanmar in 2014, and which has subsequently been reported in India, Vietnam, and Peninsula Malaysia. Chokrassameehirun et al. found specimens of this species in Phu Ruea District in Loei Province, in the north of the Country.
The second new report is of Didymoglossum mindorense, a species described in the Philippines in 2006, and subsequently reported from Borneo, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Queensland. Didymoglossum mindorense is found at low elevations, and typically close to streams. It is usually found growing around the bases of trees, but will sometimes colonise rocks. Chokrassameehirun et al. reporr specimens of this species in Hala–Bala Wildlife Sanctuary and the area around it.
See also...