About Psilotum nudum (L.) P.Beauv.
Psilotum nudum, commonly called the whisk fern, is a fern species belonging to the order Psilotales. Like all other species in this order, it does not have roots. Its scientific name translates to "bare naked" in Latin, a reference to the fact that evolutionary reduction has left it lacking, or appearing to lack, most of the organs found in typical vascular plants. While it is not actually leafless, its leaves are greatly reduced in size. P. nudum occurs in tropical Africa, Central America, tropical and subtropical North America, South America, tropical Asia, Australia, Hawaii, southern Japan, Lord Howe Island, and New Zealand, with a small number of isolated populations located in southwestern Europe, specifically in Los Alcornocales, Cádiz province, Spain. Most weeds are flowering plants, so P. nudum is an unusual weed: it is both nonflowering and rootless. In tropical regions, this plant often grows as an epiphyte. In more temperate areas such as southeastern Australia, it typically grows in rock crevices, and thousands of people walk past populations of this species at the Sydney Opera House forecourt every day. This plant grows wild in southern Japan, and was once widely cultivated as an ornamental in Japanese gardens. Just over 100 distinct garden varieties were given elaborate, unusual names. In Japanese, it is called matsubaran, meaning "pine-needle orchid", and it was considered one of the noble plants during the Edo period from 1603 to 1867. The species grows naturally on all of the main Hawaiian Islands. Local Hawaiians know it as Moa, named for its stems that resemble chicken feet. Hawaiians historically collected large quantities of its spores to use like talcum powder, applying them under loincloths to prevent chafing. The spores were also used medicinally as a purge. Hawaiian children played a game called "moa nahele", or cockfighting, using the plant's branch stems. Players interlocked the twigs of Moa and pulled on the ends; the loser's twig broke, and the winner crowed like a rooster. This species is still commonly used to make traditional Hawaiian leis. Its common name whisk fern refers to its past use to make small brooms, created by tying a handful of its branches together. It is sometimes grown in cultivation, either accidentally as a weed in greenhouses, or deliberately as one of several cultivated varieties. It may be a useful source of antimicrobial chemicals.