The term frond is used to refer to a large, divided leaf. In both common usage and botanical nomenclature, the leaves of ferns are referred to as fronds and some botanists restrict the term to this group. Other botanists allow the term frond to also apply to the large leaves of cycads and palms (Arecaceae)

When most people use the word frond they mean a large, compound leaf, but if the term is used botanically to refer to the leaves of ferns, it may be applied to smaller and undivided leaves.

Fronds, like all leaves, usually have a stalk called the petiole supporting a flattened blade, sometimes called a lamina. However, fronds are often described using distinctively different terms. The petiole of a frond is called a stipe and the continuation of the stipe into the blade portion is called the rachis. The blades may be simple (undivided), pinnatifid (deeply incised, but not truly compound), pinnate (compound with the leaflets arranged along a rachis to resemble a feather). If a frond is pinnate, the segments of the blade are called pinnae (singular: pinna) and the stalks bearing the pinnae are called petiolules (The main vein or mid-rib of a pinna is sometimes called a costa (pl., costae).

If a frond is divided into pinnae, the frond is called once pinnate. In some fronds the pinna are further divided into segments, creating a bipinnate frond. The segments into which each pinna are divided are called pinnules. Rarely, a frond may even be tripinnate, in which case the pinnule divisions are known as ultimate segments.

Pinnae may be arranged along the rachis either directly opposite one another or alternating up the stem. The arrangement may change from the base of a blade to the tip, as in the example of Blechnum shown below (from base to tip: pinnae opposite to alternate, and pinnatisect to pinnatifid).

Some fronds are not pinnately compound (or simple), but may be palmate or bifurcate. Some ferns, like members of the group Ophioglossales have a unique arrangement.

Adaxial (left) and abaxial (right) surfaces of a pinnate fern frond (Blechnum appendiculatum). Sori are evident on the abaxial surface.

Fern fronds often bear sporangia, usually on the abaxial surface of the pinnae, but sometimes marginally or scattered over the frond. The sporangia are typically clustered into a sorus (pl., sori). Associated with each sorus in many species is a membranous protective structure called an indusium: an outgrowth of the blade surface that may partly cover the sporangia. Fronds may bear hairs, scales, glands, and, in some species, bulblets for vegetative reproduction.

Fern fronds, as with all leaves, arise from the stem. The stem of a typical (leptosporangiate) fern is subterranean or horizontal on the surface of the ground. These stems are called rhizomes. Many fern fronds are initially coiled into a "fiddle-head" or "crozier" (see circinate vernation). Cycad and palm fronds do not have this type of vernation.

Some fern species feature frond dimorphism, in which fertile and sterile fronds differ in appearance and structure.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Wed Mar 3 20:11:56 2010

anyone know how to thatch in a tiki hut using sable palm fronds?
Q. anyone know how to thatch in a tiki hut using sable palm fronds?
Asked by jaybwise - Wed Jan 23 12:38:21 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. . Yes, the natives do that all day long! Check out their Video @ ; ...
Answered by JayDawg - Fri Jan 25 01:55:42 2008

Why are the fronds on my fern houseplant getting pale?
Q. Why are the fronds on my fern houseplant getting pale?
Asked by Bingo! - Wed Dec 3 20:03:03 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. They may be too crowded and might not getting enough sunlight.
Answered by lauriejune - Wed Dec 3 20:11:50 2008

my palm fronds are turning yellow then brown and dying before they have dropped can they be saved?
Q. my palm fronds are turning yellow then brown and dying before they have dropped can they be saved?
Asked by Ray D - Mon Sep 1 08:02:14 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The lower palm fronds form the palm tree trunk as they die off..just cut them off.Now palms need a special food that contain microelements, magnesium and calcium, lack of these cause all sorts of growth maladies.but don't over fertilize.a 15-5-15 or as close as you can get would be ideal (w/microelements). hope this helps
Answered by Eddie W - Mon Sep 1 09:40:31 2008

From Yahoo Answer Search: "fronds"
Sat Jun 20 15:02:21 2009

Satin-textured seaweeds from Ringstead Jessica's Nature Blog
natureinfocus.wordpress.com
Satin-textured seaweeds from Ringstead Jessica's Nature Blog

winderjssc

Wed, 03 Mar 2010 00:05:06 GM

The kelp . fronds. felt like butter soft leather and had a surface sheen like satin gleaming or glistening according to how wet it was. The colours varied from deep olive browns of drier blades, in the shade, or high and dry to greeny ...

indoor rock climbing ROCK CLIMBING IN DENVER. Want to indoor ...
indoorrockclimbing.net
indoor rock climbing ROCK CLIMBING IN DENVER. Want to indoor ...

admin

Sat, 13 Feb 2010 02:52:20 GM

Dormant crowns are simply bare-root ferns in a dormant state with the dead . fronds. removed. Mats look like a tangle of roots about the size of a saucer or small plate. Planting them is not much different than planting container-grown​ ...

wicked_music: IT'S YSSA'S PROM REVIEW~
wicked-music.livejournal.com
wicked_music: IT'S YSSA'S PROM REVIEW~

Yssa

Sun, 21 Feb 2010 13:32:38 GM

Image and video hosting by TinyPic (I named him Adam). After that, we got to dance the night away. Disco lights were everywhere and I was practically having an eye seizure. My RL . fronds. and I decided to take pics instead: ...

From Google Blog Search: "fronds"
Wed Mar 3 08:25:52 2010