: Primary dangers include habitat fragmentation due to residential and tourism development, which destroys the specific cave-mouth and rocky woodland environments it requires. Invasive species like Cyrtomium falcatum (Holly Fern) also compete for its limited ecological space.
The Adiantum bellum , commonly known as the , is a delicate, small-statured fern that serves as a hallmark of Bermuda’s native flora. As a true island endemic, it is uniquely adapted to the archipelago's limestone-rich and subtropical environment, distinguishing itself from other cosmopolitan members of the Adiantum genus. Botanical Anatomy and Characteristics adiantum bellum
As of 2017, the IUCN Red List assessed Adiantum bellum as . However, its long-term survival is inextricably tied to habitat protection. : Primary dangers include habitat fragmentation due to
: The plant exhibits significant variation in size; specimens growing in ideal soil and moisture can grow significantly larger than those in harsher rock crevices, a trait previously leading botanists to misclassify larger variants as a distinct variety called walsingense . Ecological Niche and Distribution As a true island endemic, it is uniquely
: Its native range is strictly limited to the Bermuda archipelago. It is one of the few indigenous pteridophytes on the islands and has not naturally established populations elsewhere.
: Like all ferns, it reproduces via spores rather than seeds. These spores appear as small black spots (sori) clustered on the underside of the leaflet margins, often protected by the reflexed edge of the leaf tissue—a characteristic known as a "false indusium".