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Cinnamon Ferns In The Wild: Exploring Their Natural Habitat This article will take you on a journey to explore the natural habitat of cinnamon ferns We'll look at where these ferns thrive, how they interact with their surroundings, and why they are important to the ecosystems they inhabit
Cinnamon Fern (Osmunda cinnamomea) - Illinois Wildflowers Range Habitat: The native Cinnamon Fern is occasional in southern and northern Illinois, uncommon in west-central Illinois, and absent from the central and east-central sections of the state (see Distribution Map)
Osmundastrum cinnamomeum (Cinnamon Fern) - Minnesota Wildflowers As the fern emerges from the ground in early spring it is covered in a light brownish-colored wool but it is quickly lost Leaves are once compound, generally lance-shaped in outline, up to 40 inches long and 10 inches across, widest below the middle and gradually tapering at the tip end
Osmundastrum cinnamomeum ssp. cinnamomeum (Cinnamon Fern) - FSUS Common name: Cinnamon Fern Phenology: Mar-May Habitat: Bogs, peatlands, pocosins, wet savannas, floodplains, blackwater stream swamps, marshes, and other wetlands, less typically in merely mesic or even dry-mesic forests, especially if seasonally sub-irrigated Distribution: NL (Labrador) west to MN, south to s
Osmunda cinnamomea - US Forest Service SPECIES: Osmunda cinnamomea IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : NO-ENTRY PALATABILITY : Cinnamon fern was grazed by cattle in southeastern North Carolina in pond pine (Pinus rigida var serotina) forests It ranked second only to cane (Arundinaria gigantea) in cattle preference
Adirondack Ferns: Cinnamon Fern | Osmundastrum cinnamomeum Keys to identifying the Cinnamon Fern and differentiating it from other ferns include its preferred habitat and its physical characteristics Cinnamon Ferns prefer wet soil, so look for it in wetland habitats, including swamps and the edges of bogs
Cinnamon Fern, Osmunda cinnamomea L. , Minnesota Ferns Habitat: Plant this fern in acidic, rich soil, sun or shade, but the soil must be consistently moist or wet Plants go dormant if too dry and die if consistently dry
Cinnamon Fern - Sylvan Gardens Landscape Contractors Cinnamon Fern (Osmundastrum cinnamomeum) are short, clump-forming ferns that are adapted to the shady woodlands of the American Midwest Cinnamon Fern prefers fertile, acidic, medium to wet soils in part shade to full shade
Osmundastrum cinnamomeum – Native Gardens of Blue Hill Native Habitat Cinnamon ferns prefer wet acidic soil and shady to partially shady sites Although this plant occasionally occurs in non-wetlands, cinnamon ferns are more likely to be found on poorly-drained sites in swamps, marshes, and wet forests Garden Uses