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The species is widespread in south- and east tropical Africa, southern Africa and the western Indian Ocean region. It occurs naturally in a broad coastal belt in South Africa , Lesotho , Eswatini , Angola , Malawi , Burundi , Tanzania , Mozambique , Zimbabwe , Mauritius , Réunion , Amsterdam Island and Madagascar , and was first described by ...
It grows in cool, shady, moist forest, beside rivers and waterfalls. It is found at elevations of 360–1,820 metres (1,180–5,970 ft). The specific epithet capensis refers to the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, where the type specimen was collected. Gymnosphaera capensis subsp. polypodioides is native to the New World tropics in South America.
Sori of Ptisana fraxinea Ptisana is a genus in the eusporangiate fern family Marattiaceae , comprising species historically treated in the genus Marattia . The establishment of this genus follows the 2008 work by Andrew G. Murdock, which supported recognition of this group on the basis of genetic analysis and morphology.
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Ibrahim Sori (died c. 1784), leader of the Kingdom of Fouta Djallon in what is now Guinea in West Africa; Abdul Rahman Ibrahima Sori (1762–1829), West African prince, enslaved in the United States; Fumihiko Sori (born 1964), Japanese film director and producer; Soni Sori (born c. 1975), Indian schoolteacher and human rights activist
Hypolepis sparsisora, the giant edgelobed fern, [citation needed] is an Afrotropical fern species with an extensive range in Africa and Madagascar, where it occurs at diverse elevations. [1] In South Africa it is present in the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and the Western Cape.
Sori on the abaxial surface of the foliage frond of Aglaomorpha quercifolia. Basket ferns are characterized by the presence of two types of fronds , fertile foliage fronds and sterile nest fronds. The dark green foliage fronds are large, 2–4 feet (0.61–1.22 m) long, with elongated stalks.
Abdul Rahman Ibrahima was a Torodbe Fulani Muslim prince born in 1762, [3] in Timbuktu, [4] the son of Ibrahima Sori and a Moorish wife. [5] When he was aged five, his father removed the family from Timbuktu to Timbo, [4] now located in Guinea, and there in 1776 Ibrahima consolidated the Islamic confederation of Fouta Djallon, with Timbo as its capital, eventually succeeding as its Almami.