Distinctive among ferns, staghorn has two types of leaves, or fronds: foliar and basal. The species name, bifurcatum, and the common name, staghorn, hint at the appearance of its foliar fronds. The fronds resemble deer antlers -- stag horns -- that are forked into two branches -- bifurcatum. Because ferns are flowerless plants that do not produce seeds, they must rely on the reproductive adaptation of producing spores. A staghorn’s foliar fronds are also called fertile fronds, because they are the ones that produce and bear the spores. These foliar fronds also perform photosynthesis, which makes food for the plant.
Basal fronds do not look like leaves, even though that’s what they are. They are round, dish- or shield-shaped structures that are green when immature, but turn brown and papery with age. Basal fronds are also called infertile or sterile fronds because they do not produce or bear spores, the reproductive structures. Instead, they are adapted to attach staghorn ferns to the trees on which they grow and to collect water and nutrients that wash down the tree trunks. Basal fronds trap dead leaves and insects between their cup-shaped structures and tree trunks. They also cover and protect the roots, which absorb the trapped rainwater and decomposed nutrients.
If you look closely at staghorn fronds, you see tiny silvery-white stellate, or star-shaped, hairs that look like a soft, felt covering. It’s important not to wipe them off, mistaking them for a buildup of dust or a chemical residue. Instead, they are an important adaptation and removing them may compromise staghorn’s health. Their purpose is twofold: They help retain moisture, and they may protect the fronds against insect attack. Staghorn ferns that grow indoors benefit from daily misting, -- the droplets adhere to the hairs and increase the humidity around the plants.
Staghorn fern grows as a perennial in U.S. Department of Agriculture plant hardiness zones 9 through 12. As an epiphyte, staghorn fern grows with its roots attached to tree trunks and branches, but the roots do not penetrate the bark and the plant does not feed off its tree host. Although the roots never make contact with the soil, they are adapted to growing above ground by being covered by the basal fronds. This protective cover shields the roots from the sun and keeps the roots moist.