Hello rs79,
this looks like Microsorum linguiforme. Its venation is similar to that of M. pteropus, but M. linguiforme, an epiphyte or lithophyte, is not closer related to M. pteropus.
Colysis wrightii (= Leptochilus macrophyllus var. wrightii): It grew submersed for several months on a lava stone in my tank indeed, but I can't designate it as a good aquarium plant. While the grow rate was similar to M. pteropus, new submersed leaves were pale green and smaller than the emersed ones:
Some got brown and deformed:
The plant was prone to algae growth more than some forms of M. pteropus growing close to the C. wrightii.
Both terrestrial and submersed leaves of this fern are much stiffer than these of M. pteropus.
Now it grows as a terrestrial plant again in a mini-"greenhouse" on the windowsill.
According to H. P. Nooteboom (The Microsoroid Ferns, Blumea 42 (1997), 261-395), Colysis wrightii doesn't occur especially on or in waters. But there are interesting informations in this paper about the ecology of other Colysis (Leptochilus) taxa:
- Leptochilus macrophyllus var. fluviatilis (Colysis fluviatilis, Polypodium linealifolium), Borneo, Philippines, Sulu Archip., New Guinea: a rheophyte, "On rocks in and by streams, often submerged".
- L. macrophyllus var. pedunculatus (C. pedunculata, C. membranacea): "Epiphytic and epilithic, on boulders by streams".
- L. macrophyllus var. macrophyllus (C. macrophylla etc.): "Terrestrial and on rocks by streams..., usually in wet places."
- L. minor (Colysis minor, Gymnopteris metallica etc.), India, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Thailand, Sumatra, Borneo, Sulawesi, Philippines : "Terrestrial, often on rocks in stream along water level", "Some forms possess a metallic blue tint when alive... . This metallic tint may be induced by the rheophytic habitat."
- L. hemionitideus (C. hemionitidea), S-China, NE-India, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Thailand: "Terrestrial on stones in stream, ..., on wet ground in streambed in dense forest, locally common."
Bye
Heiko