In the meantime, the daughter frond produces a granddaughter frond at its proximal end (Fig. 2b and c). The fast vegetative multiplication of fronds leads to the presence of at least four to five generations (upto ten plantlets; Fig. 2b and c) all of them still united with the parent frond, in what is visible externally as a single daughter frond attached to a mother frond; this creates spatial problems to the younger sisters of the daughter frond pushing them to the interior of the pouch (Fig. 2b and c). As soon as the eldest daughter (IIa)detaches from the parent (I), a shift in the orientation of the sisters rounded takes place and the next older daughter (IIb) takes its position to the opening of the vegetative pouch of the mother frond (Fig. 2b andc). Over time, the youngest daughter (IId) also occupies the same position as the eldest daughter (IIa) at present from where it will be released to the exterior.