Sceptridium is a genus of seedless vascular plants in the family Ophioglossaceae,[1] closely allied to (and often included as a subgenus[2] of) the genus Botrychium (the moonworts and grapeferns). It is also closely related to the genus Botrypus (the rattlesnake fern, often treated as the subgenus Osmundopteris under Botrychium). Sceptridium species are commonly called the grape-ferns.
These plants are small with fleshy roots, and reproduce by spores shed into the air. They differ from the moonworts in having at least some sterile fronds (all fronds in Botrychium are spore-bearing), and in the fronds being bi- or tri-pinnate (Botrychium are single pinnate, or rarely bipinnate); and from Botrypus in being evergreen, or at least winter-green (Botrypus are deciduous) and having the non-spore-bearing part of the frond long-stalked (short-stalked in Botrypus).
^B. biternatum Flora of North America, www.eFloras.org 26 Dec 2011
^Montgomery, James D. (1990). "Survivorship and Predation Changes in Five Populations of Botrychium dissectum in Eastern Pennsylvania". American Fern Journal. 4. 80 (4): 173–182. doi:10.2307/1547206. JSTOR1547206.
^B. dissectum Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. 26 Dec 2011
^B. dissectum Flora of North America, www.eFloras.org 26 Dec 2011
^B. obliquum Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. 16 Jan 2012