As a group of plants, ferns are not of great economic value. Many different species have been used as a minor food source and for medicine in various parts of the world. Edible fern crosiers (young leaves with coiled hook-shaped tips) are popular in some areas. The ostrich fern (Matteuccia) of northeastern North America is frequently eaten, apparently with no ill effect, but the two ferns most commonly consumed in East Asia (Osmunda and Pteridium) have been shown to be strongly carcinogenic. The minute aquatic mosquito fern (Azolla) has become a valuable plant, especially in Southeast Asia; a blue-green algae (Anabaena azollae) is always found in pockets on the leaves of Azolla and helps convert nitrogen to a form usable by other plants (see nitrogen-fixation), thus greatly increasing the productivity of rice paddies where the fern occurs. The greatest economic value of ferns has been in horticulture, with large nurseries supplying millions of plants annually for both indoor decoration and outdoor gardens and landscaping. On the negative side, the poisonous bracken (Pteridium aquilinum), which often spoils the grazing value of various lands, is considered a noxious weed in many countries.
A major value of ferns is in biological research, for they have retained a primitive life cycle involving two separate and more or less independent generations, or growth phases, the plants of which are wholly different in many respects. Water ferns (genus Ceratopteris), which have relatively short life cycles and for which many mutations have been characterized, have become model organisms for genetics teaching and research.
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