DICRANACEAE Schimper: Robert R. Ireland JR
DICRANACEAE Schimper: Robert R. Ireland JR
DICRANACEAE Schimper: Robert R. Ireland JR
Plants small to large, often in dense tufts. Stems erect, simple or dichotomously to irregularly
branched, usually with central strand, often densely radiculose, tips occasionally deciduous.
Leaves in several rows around the stem, erect or secund, often falcate-secund, sometimes crispate,
short- to long-lanceolate, whole leaves or their tips sometimes deciduous; costa single, usually
strong, percurrent to excurrent, sometimes ending in a short to long hyaline awn, smooth, ridged
or lamellose on abaxial surface, rhizoids occasionally on adaxial or abaxial surface near leaf
base; laminal cells smooth or sometimes distal cells mammillose or papillose on one or both
sides, papillae rarely forked, or toothed by projecting cell ends, pitted or nonpitted; proximal
cells elongate, often differentiated in alar region, sometimes undifferentiated. Specialized asexual
reproduction absent or occasionally present as brood leaves, microphyllous branches, borne in
axils of distal leaves or as rhizoidal tubers. Sexual condition autoicous, dioicous or
pseudomonoicous. Seta solitary or several per perichaetium, elongate, usually straight, sometimes
flexuose or cygneous. Capsule exserted, erect, inclined, or sometimes curved, cylindrical or
ovoid, smooth, ridged, furrowed or irregularly wrinkled, sometimes strumose; stomata present
or absent, superficial; annulus present or absent, often compound, deciduous or persistent;
operculum conic or obliquely rostrate from a conic base; peristome single, usually of 16
lanceolate teeth, deeply divided into 2 or rarely 3 divisions, usually vertically striolate or pitted-
striolate proximally, papillose distally. Calyptra cucullate, smooth, naked, sometimes fringed
at base, usually covering most of capsule, fugacious. Spores mostly spheric, smooth to papillose.
Genera 50–52, species ca. 900 (17 genera, 90 species in the flora): worldwide.
Distinctive characters of this large acrocarpous family include the erect, often tomentose stems;
mostly narrow, lanceolate, occasionally falcate or falcate-secund leaves, with a single, narrow
to broad costa, with or without rhizoids at the base, sometimes ending in a hyaline, occasionally
toothed apex, costa in cross section with or without stereid bands, leaf cells usually smooth,
sometimes mammillose, or rarely with a single papilla on one or both sides, papillae rarely forked,
asexual propagation by specialized deciduous branches, deciduous leaves or leaf apices, rarely
rhizoidal tubers; sporophytes usually solitary or rarely clustered, setae mostly elongate, straight
or rarely flexuose or cygneous, capsule cylindric to ovoid, erect to horizontal, smooth or ribbed,
sometimes strumose, operculum usually obliquely rostrate, peristome single, with 16 teeth often
divided 1/2 way to the base, usually striolate or pitted-striolate proximally, papillose distally.
358
DICRANACEAE 359
SELECTED REFERENCES Müller, P. and J.-P. Frahm. 1987. A review of the Paraleucobryoideae (Dicranaceae). Nova Hedwigia 45:
283–314. Williams, R. S. 1913. Dicranaceae. In: N. L. Britton et al., eds. 1905+. North American Flora.... 47+ vols. New
York. Vol. 15, pp. 77–158.
1. AONGSTROEMIA Bruch & Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 1: 171. 1846 · [For Johan
Ångström, 1813–1879, Swedish bryologist]
Patricia M. Eckel
Plants small, gregarious or in loose thin mats or tufts, yellowish green, orange-red to brown-
green, rather dull. Stems erect, 3–6(–12) mm, simple or occasionally forked, central strand
present; scarcely radiculose, rhizoids red, smooth. Leaves ovate or shortly lanceolate-acuminate,
concave proximally, tubulose when acuminate, erect and appressed-imbricate when dry,
somewhat loosely so when moist; apices in proximal leaves broadly acute grading to obtuse to
acuminate-subulate in distal leaves; margins plane to incurved, entire, notched at the apex; costa
prominent, single, ending before the apex, smooth on all surfaces, guide cells in 1 row, stereid
bands 2, the adaxial band reduced, abaxial and adaxial epidermis prominent; laminal cells convex
in section, without pits, smooth, mostly elongate throughout, shorter in the apex, walls in surface
view thick-walled, irregularly elongate-hexagonal, rhomboid or rectangular, alar cells
undifferentiated. Specialized asexual reproduction absent. Sexual condition dioicous; perigonial
plants similar to the perichaetial, perigonium terminal, conspicuous, perigonial leaves larger than
the cauline leaves, broadly lanceolate-triangular with an abrupt acumination, broadly tubulose;
perichaetium terminal, conspicuous, leaves larger than stem leaves, convolute-sheathing, abruptly
long-acuminate to subulate. Seta elongate, smooth, erect, yellow-orange to red. Capsule erect,
globose, ovate or short-cylindric, straight, symmetric, smooth wet or dry, annular cells weakly
differentiated in one layer; operculum conic to short-rostrate, oblique; peristome variably absent
or present, single, 16 teeth ± cleft to 1/2 the length, vertically pitted-striolate basally, weakly
papillose to smooth distally, reddish brown to nearly hyaline. Calyptra cucullate, smooth, naked,
fugacious. Spores 12–20 µm, smooth to finely papillose.
Species 7 (1 in the flora): North America, Mexico, Central America, South America, Eurasia,
Atlantic Islands.
Aongstroemia is found in north-temperate and tropical areas. The julaceous gametophyte
of Aongstroemia species often has been compared to similar habits of other genera, e.g., A. J.
Grout’s (1928–1940, vol. 1) statement, seconded by H. A. Crum (1994b), that Aongstroemia
has the habit of an Anomobryum (Bryaceae) but the peristome of a Dicranum. The genus
Aongstroemia highlights the rather poor differentiation of Dicranaceae from the Ditrichaceae.
The latter has “peristome teeth that are divided into terete rather than flat divisions and lack
vertical pit-striations” (H. A. Crum and J. A. Snider 1994). Among the genera discussed below,
the only consistent distinction afforded Aongstroemia is the dioicous sexuality. Eperistomate
species of Aongstroemia in Mexico, Central America, and South America may be confused with
species in Astomiopsis Müller Hal., which also has julaceous stems, similar leaves, areolation
and spores (smooth to faintly papillose) but lacks a peristome. Astomiopsis has autoicous rather
than dioicous inflorescences, and the rather well-differentiated annulus in two rows is
characteristic (J. A. Snider 1994c). Monotypic Bryomanginia Thériot, without a peristome, is
also autoicous, with a prominent annulus, distally bistratose leaf laminae, fastigiately branched
habit, and bipolar ornamented spores (proximally vermiculose, distally rugose) (J. A. Snider
Aongstroemia · DICRANACEAE 361
AONGSTROEMIA ° ARCTOA
1994d). An informative discussion of these genera has been given by W. R. Buck and R. H.
Zander (1980).
The highest diversity for Aongstroemia is in Mexico, Central America, and South America.
1. Aongstroemia longipes (Sommerfelt) Bruch & Perichaetium a large apical tuft, the leaves larger than
Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 1: 173. 1846 stem leaves, to 1.5 mm, long-lanceolate and tubulose,
Weissia longipes Sommerfelt, Suppl. acuminate from a broad, sheathing base, in most distal
# Fl. Lapp., 52, plate 1, figs. 1–10. leaves rapidly or fairly rapidly narrowed into a blunt
#
1826; Dicranum julaceum Hooker subula. Seta 4–10(–12) mm. Capsule exserted, brown,
#
# 0.6–1 mm, without stomates; peristome entire, perforate
#
Stems stiff, slenderly julaceous, or divided nearly 1/2 distally, more or less vertically
#
#
#
sterile and young material filiform, striolate to almost smooth basally, yellow and finely
central strand distinct. Leaves papillose to smooth distally; operculum to 0.4 mm.
proximally minute, 0.5–1 mm, Capsules mature late summer. Moist, exposed, sandy
scalelike, becoming larger and or silty soil of depressions, river and stream banks in
ovate-lanceolate distally; apex montane coniferous forest regions, subalpine regions,
obtuse, subcucullate to acuminate-subulate in distal mountains, and northern latitudes; low to high elevations;
leaves; lamina 1-stratose; costa strong, less than a quarter Greenland; Alta., B.C., Nfld. and Labr. (Nfld.), N.W.T.,
of the leaf width, in section hydroids absent; median Yukon; Alaska, Wash.; Arctic; n Europe; n Asia; Atlantic
laminal cells (25–)30–60 × 8–15 µm, thinner, longer and Islands (Iceland).
narrower at the margin and forming a smooth, non-erose, The only species in the genus reported for China,
indistinct border parallel to the margin. Perigonium a Aongstroemia orientalis Mitten of alpine regions, has
dark knob or apical rosette wider than the stem, formed been described as having an apex “sharply bent to one
by largest leaves, incurved-tubulose, to twice the length side at the tips” (Gao C. et al. 1999). Leaves in American
of the cauline leaves, abruptly narrowed into a tubulose populations of Aongstroemia longipes display this
acumination that can be longer than the leaf body. characteristic as well, although less distinctly. E. Nyholm
362 DICRANACEAE · Aongstroemia · Arctoa
(1986) indicated that A. longipes resembles Pohlia filum Aongstroemiopsis julacea (Dozy & Molkenboer) M.
(Schimper) Mårtensson of similar habitats in Scandinavia, Fleischer, of Asia, differs in its autoicous sexuality,
but that the leaf apex is sharply pointed in P. filum, and prominent excurrent costa, and lack of peristome (H. C.
obtuse in A. longipes. For discussion of the species’ Gangulee 1969+, fasc. 2).
ecology see L. C. Bliss and J. E. Cantlon (1957).
2. ARCTOA Bruch & Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 1: 151. 1846 · [Greek arktos, bear,
alluding to an arctic or northern distribution]
Steven G. Newmaster
Plants in dense tufts, dark green to yellowish brown, shiny. Stems (0.5–)1–2(–5) cm, branches
simple, sparsely radiculose. Leaves lanceolate, subulate, erect-spreading, sometimes falcate-
secund; margins erect, entire, or serrulate near the tips; costa excurrent as an awn, narrow,
stereids poorly differentiated from median guide cells; distal laminal cells rectangular to
subquadrate, smooth or slightly mammillose; basal laminal cells elongate, smooth, sometimes
porose, alar cells sometimes differentiated and inflated. Perichaetial leaves with a sheathing
base. Sexual condition autoicous. Seta solitary, 3–6 mm, erect, stout, yellow. Capsule erect,
exserted or immersed in perichaetial leaves, symmetric, obovoid, constricted below mouth,
furrowed when dry, urn 0.5–1.2 mm; operculum obliquely rostrate; peristome single, of 16 red-
brown teeth, divided halfway into two segments, vertically or irregularly striolate. Calyptra
cucullate, smooth. Spores spheric, 16–30 µm, finely roughened, green.
Species ca. 4 (3 in the flora): North America, Europe, Asia.
A rare northern and alpine genus, Arctoa occurs on rock or soil and is distinguished by its
medium-sized, Dicranum-like habit, with poorly differentiated stereid and guide cells. It may
be confused with Kiaeria, which differs by a longer seta, and capsules often strumose, with
narrow mouths.
SELECTED REFERENCE Allen, B. H. 1998. The genus Arctoa (Musci: Dicranaceae) in Maine. Evansia 15: 131–137.
1. Peristome teeth not wide-spreading; distal leaf cells 1–2:1; costa short-excurrent . . . . . 3. Arctoa hyperborea
1. Peristome teeth wide-spreading; distal leaf cells 2–5:1; costa long-excurrent.
2. Capsule straight, immersed; seta short; awn entire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Arctoa anderssonii
2. Capsule curved, exserted; seta long; awn toothed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2. Arctoa fulvella
1. Arctoa anderssonii Wichura, Flora 42: 432, plate 7, Perichaetial leaves much larger than stem leaves. Seta
figs. 3–8. 1859 short, 1–3 mm. Capsule immersed in perichaetial leaves,
Arctoa fulvella var. anderssonii straight; peristome teeth spreading outward when dry.
# (Wichura) Grout Spores 16–27 µm.
Capsules mature summer. Siliceous rock; high
# Plants small, in compact, yellow- elevations; Greenland; Yukon; Europe.
brown or green tufts. Stems A rare high-arctic species, Arctoa anderssonii was once
(0.5–)1–2(–4) cm. Leaves erect considered a variety of A. fulvella, but is distinguished
spreading or falcate-secund, by a short seta, large perichaetial leaves, and straight,
lanceolate, subulate, 2–3 mm; immersed capsule. It has a costa that is more shortly
costa 30–55 µm wide at base, excurrent than that of A. fulvella but longer than that of
long-excurrent, rough near tip; A. hyperborea.
distal laminal cells mostly quadrate (2–5:1), incrassate;
basal laminal cells elongate, alar cells differentiated.
Arctoa · Campylopodiella · DICRANACEAE 363
2. Arctoa fulvella (Dickson) Bruch & Schimper, Bryol. 3. Arctoa hyperborea (Gunnerus ex Withering) Bruch &
Europ. 1: 156. 1846 Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 1: 157. 1846
Bryum fulvellum Dickson, Fasc. Fl. Bryum hyperboreum Gunnerus ex
# Crypt. Brit. 4: 10, plate 11, fig. 1. # Withering, Syst. Arr. Brit. Pl. ed. 4,
#
1801; Dicranum fulvellum Smith 3: 811. 1801; Cynodontium
#
#
Plants in loose to compact tufts, 5–30 mm. Stems radiculose. Leaves erect-patent, lanceolate,
ending in a long acumen, entire or with a few teeth at tips; costa filling 1/2–2/3 of the leaf base,
excurrent, in transverse section with large adaxial and abaxial hyalocysts, a median band of
chlorocysts and 2–4 adaxial stereids; alar cells weakly developed; laminal cells long-rectangular.
Sexual condition dioicous; perigonial leaves from broader base suddenly contracted into a slender
subula. Seta yellowish or brownish in age, erect, twisted distally. Capsule erect, elliptic to
cylindric, yellowish, without stomata; operculum long-rostrate; annulus present; peristome teeth
16, divided nearly to the base. Calyptra cucullate, fimbriate or entire at base. Spores 11–19
µm.
364 DICRANACEAE · Campylopodiella
CAMPYLOPODIELLA ° BROTHERA
Species 4 (2 in the flora): North America, Mexico, Central America, South America, Asia.
The species listed here were previously included in the genus Atractylocarpus Mitten because
of considerable confusion involved with the use of that generic name (J.-P. Frahm 2000). This
was caused by the fact that the type species of Atractylocarpus turned out to belong to a genus
later described as Campylopodiella. Therefore Frahm and P. Isoviita (1986) proposed
conservation of the name Atractylocarpus, which was, however, rejected by the nomenclature
committee at the International Botanical Congress in Tokyo. That decision was later corrected
at the Congress in St. Louis, thus preserving the use of the name as proposed before, making
new combinations unnecessary.
Campylopodiella comprises three species in the Himalayas, Central America, and northern
South America, of which two have been found also in the flora area, each with one record.
One species is also known from Eocene Baltic amber, which is presumably identical with the
extant species from the Himalayas. The genus is characterized by a unique transverse section
of the costa with a median band of chlorocysts and a few ventral stereids, which can be seen
under the microscope without transverse section as dark band in the middle of the costa.
1. Alar cells distinct, inflated; leaves 5–8 times as long as wide; basal laminal cells in about 6
rows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Campylopodiella flagellacea
1. Alar cells indistinct; leaves 10–13 times longer than wide; basal laminal cells in 15–18 rows
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2. Campylopodiella stenocarpa
Campylopodiella · Brothera · DICRANACEAE 365
1. Campylopodiella flagellacea (Müller Hal.) Frahm & 2. Campylopodiella stenocarpa (Wilson) P. Müller &
Isoviita, Taxon 37: 968. 1988 J.-P. Frahm, Nova Hedwigia 45: 290. 1987
Dicranum flagellaceum Müller Hal., Trichostomum stenocarpum Wilson
Syn. Musc. Frond. 2: 597. 1851; in B. Seemann, Bot. Voy. Herald,
Atractylocarpus flagellaceus (Müller 344. 1857; Atractylocarpus
Hal.) Williams costaricensis (Müller Hal.) R. S.
Plants erect, yellowish green, in Williams; A. stenocarpus (Wilson)
tufts. Stems 3–15 mm, radiculose. Zander
#
#
4. BROTHERA Müller Hal., Gen. Musc. Frond., 258. 1901 · [For Viktor Ferdinand
Brotherus, 1849–1929, Finnish bryologist]
Jan-Peter Frahm
Plants small, 3–6 mm, in dense, yellowish to grayish green mats. Stems radiculose at base.
Leaves erect-patent when dry, lanceolate, gradually contracted to a short, canaliculate apex;
costa filling 2/3 of the leaf base, not sharply delimited from the lamina, excurrent, in transverse
section with lax abaxial and adaxial hyalocysts and a median band of stereids; alar cells weakly
differentiated, hyaline; basal laminal cells hyaline, of 8–10 rows, 2-stratose towards the costa,
rectangular; distal laminal cells rectangular. Sexual condition dioicous. Seta 5–6 mm, yellowish,
sinuose and twisted sinistrorse in the distal portion. Capsule erect, yellowish green, 0.5 × 1.2
mm, smooth, contracted towards the peristome; annulus present; operculum rostrate, half the
length of the urn; peristome teeth 16, entire or rarely perforated, yellowish, striate at base and
366 DICRANACEAE · Brothera · Campylopus
papillose at tips, 210–240 µm. Calyptra cucullate, fringed at base. Spores yellowish green,
smooth, 10–13 µm; exothecial walls incrassate, variable, without stomata.
Species 1: e North America, Mexico, Central America, Asia, Africa.
1. Brothera leana (Sullivant) Müller Hal., Gen. Musc. reproduction by clusters of spindle-shaped brood leaves
Frond., 258. 1901 in the comal tufts. Sporophytes not found in North
Leucophanes leanum Sullivant, America.
Musc. Allegh., 41. 1846; Humic or peaty soil, rocks, especially sandstone bluffs,
Campylopus leanus (Sullivant) rotten wood, rarely bark of trees; 0–2000 m; Ark., Ill.,
Sullivant & Lesquereux; Iowa, Ky., Md., Minn., Miss., Mo., N.C., Ohio, Pa., S.C.,
Leucobryum leanum (Sullivant) Tenn., Va., W.Va., Wis.; Mexico; Central America
#
# Kindberg; Syrrhopodon leanus (Guatemala); Asia; Africa (Malawi).
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
# ##
(Sullivant) Lesquereux & James Brothera leana is easily identified by clusters of brood
# #
#
leaves always present in the comal tufts. Campylopus
Leaves 2–3 mm; margins entire; fragilis has a similar appearance, but it has a different
costa 155–180 µm wide; basal transverse section of the costa, with dorsal instead of
laminal cells 19–55 × 4–19 µm, narrower at margins; median stereids. Furthermore, the ranges of the two
distal laminal cells 24–55 × 3–7 µm. Specialized asexual species in North America do not overlap.
Plants usually 3–10 cm, occasionally longer. Stems usually simple, not tomentose or with dense
reddish or whitish tomentum. Leaves 3–12 mm, erect-patent or appressed foliate, narrowly
lanceolate, ending in a smooth or denticulate, straight or reflexed tip; alar cells large, inflated,
hyaline or reddish brown, or not differentiated; basal laminal cells thin-walled, hyaline, or thick-
walled, chlorophyllose, sometimes with pitted walls, rectangular to subquadrate; distal laminal
cell walls incrassate, quadrate to short-rectangular, oblique, or oval to elongate oval; costa strong,
filling 1/3–4/5 of leaf width, excurrent in a more or less long, chlorophyllose or hyaline awn, in
transverse section showing a median band of deuters, an adaxial layer of hyalocysts, substereids
or stereids, and abaxially layers of stereid or non-stereid cells, and an abaxial row of chlorocysts;
abaxial side of the costa smooth, ridged or lamellose. Specialized asexual reproduction by brood
leaves, microphyllous branches, deciduous leaves or stem tips or rhizoidal tubers. Sexual
condition dioicous. Perichaetia terminal, often bud like, rarely pseudolateral; perichaetial leaves
with a broader, sheathing base and a long, narrow subula. Seta 5–10 mm, those of young
sporophytes curved downward, pushing the immature capsule between the comal leaves and
leaving the calyptra behind when the mature capsule curves upward, sinuose, twisted, cygneous
when wet and performing uncoiling movements. Capsule erect and symmetric or curved and
asymmetric, sometimes strumose, furrowed when empty; annulus present but not dehiscent;
operculum rostrate, half as long as the capsule; peristome teeth divided to the middle in two
prongs, reddish or orange and horizontally striate proximally, hyaline and papillose distally.
Calyptra cucullate, ciliate or entire at base. Spores ca. 13 µm, smooth or papillose.
Species ca. 180 (17 in the flora): North America, Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South
America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Atlantic Islands, Pacific Islands, Australia.
The North American species of Campylopus were revised by J.-P. Frahm (1980) based on a
study of more than 1000 herbarium specimens. At that time, four species of Campylopus were
Campylopus · DICRANACEAE 367
recorded as new to North America and two species were placed into synonymy. The most recent
checklist of the mosses of North America (L. E. Anderson et al. 1990) lists 18 species. Of these,
the record of C. zygodonticarpus is based on a misidentification and C. paradoxus is a
superfluous name for C. flexuosus, which is also included in the list. Since that time, C. japonicus
has been newly recorded for North America, resulting in a total of 17 species, and new names
have been introduced for C. aureus, C. japonicus, and C. schwarzii.
Campylopus was formerly divided into three subgenera on the basis of morphology of the
transverse section of the costa. Although this classification is no longer used, the anatomy of
the costa is still an important character for identification. It is, however, not in all cases necessary
to prepare cross sections. The presence of adaxial stereids or hyalocysts can also be observed
under the microscope by surface view of the adaxial side of the costa. Since the perichaetial
leaves vary in both form and by the presence of thin-walled cells walls in species that usually
have thick-walled cells, the study of such characters should be avoided. Alar cells are generally
also not a valuable character in Campylopus; they are little differentiated in plants growing in
damp habitats but are well developed in plants in exposed habitats with water uptake from the
underground. The same is true for the presence or absence of a tomentum. Identification is
facilitated if the ranges of the species are considered. Many species are found only very locally.
SELECTED REFERENCES Frahm, J.-P. 1980. Synopsis of the genus Campylopus in North America north of Mexico. Bryologist
83: 570–588. Frahm, J.-P. 1994. A contribution to the differentiation of Campylopus subulatus and C. tallulensis in North
America. Evansia 11: 95–99. Frahm, J.-P. and D. H. Vitt. 1978. A taxonomic study of Campylopus schimperi and C. subulatus
in North America. Brittonia 30: 365–372.
3. Campylopus atrovirens De Notaris, Syllab. Musc., with higher elevations. It may perhaps deserve to be
221. 1838 recognized at the varietal rank. Forms with falcate leaves
Plants 1–10 cm, in tall tufts, as occurring in Europe or Asia have not yet been found
blackish proximally, yellowish in North America. Sporophytes, produced very rarely,
#
brown distally. Leaves 4–10 mm, were found in North America only once, in British
straight in wet and dry state, Columbia
#
# narrowly lanceolate, those of
#
deciduous stem tips often even 3b. Campylopus atrovirens var. cucullatifolius J.-P.
#
longer and narrower, ending in a Frahm, Bryologist 83: 574, fig. 1. 1981
very long subula; alar cells Leaves with concolorous,
auriculate, hyaline or red-brown; cucullate tips.
basal laminal cells usually shortly rectangular to #
Wet rocks; elevation not known
subquadrate, thick-walled with pitted walls, 4–8 rows (mountain); Alaska; Europe; Asia
of elongate hyaline cells at basal margins of leaves; distal (China).
laminal cells elongate oval to vermicular, walls incrassate; In North America this variety
costa filling 1/2–2/3 of leaf width, excurrent in a long, is known only from the type
straight, spinose-dentate hyaline hairpoint, in transverse locality on Kuju Island, Alaska,
section showing adaxial hyalocysts as wide as the median and otherwise only from three
deuters, and abaxial groups of stereids, weakly ribbed at collections from Great Britain and China. Cucullate
back. Specialized asexual reproduction by broken stem instead of hyaline tipped leaves are found in a number of
tips. Seta 4 mm. Capsule 1.5 mm, ovoid, brownish, species of this genus.
operculum obliquely rostrate.
Varieties 2 (2 in the flora): North America, Europe, 4. Campylopus carolinae Grout, Moss Fl. N. Amer. 1:
Asia. 249, plate 122. 1939
Campylopus atrovirens is similar to C. sinensis, which Plants usually less than 1 cm, in
differs by shorter, not vermicular distal laminal cells and loose mats, dark green to
shorter hyaline leaf tips. The latter has been found only brownish green or blackish; leaves
once, in British Columbia, but it could be that collections erect-patent; stems sparsely
of C. sinensis from the west coast of North America have tomentose. Leaves 2.5–4 mm,
been misidentified as C. atrovirens. small, lanceolate, ending in a
1. Leaves ending in a hyaline tip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #
concolorous straight tip,
convolute in the distal part, with
#
leaf, distal laminal cells short-rectangular or oblique, very in Great Britain in 1942, and since the beginning of the
small; costa very broad, occupying 3/4–4/5 of leaf width, 1970s has been aggressively spreading through Europe.
long-excurrent in a fine almost entire subula, in transverse It now ranges from Iceland to Spain and from Ireland to
section showing very large, lax adaxial hyalocysts filling Poland. The first record in North America dates from
half of the costa thickness and no abaxial stereids, faintly August, 1975, and was made on a gravel roof of a
abaxially ridged. Specialized asexual reproduction by building of Humboldt University, Arcata, California. The
deciduous leaves or broken leaf tips. Sporophytes not species is undoubtedly introduced in North America and
known. is spreading here as rapidly as in Europe. The name C.
Wet soil and soil covered rocks, wet cliffs in boggy introflexus was used previously for C. pilifer, thus all old
slopes in subalpine habitats; low elevations; B.C.; references for C. introflexus in North America have to
w Europe; e Asia. be referred to that species. Also, specimens of C.
Campylopus gracilis is easily recognized by a very surinamensis and C. oerstedianus from North America
broad costa, occupying 3/4 or more of the leaf width, very were named as C. introflexus. Campylopus introflexus
small shortly rectangular, distal laminal cells and large is easily recognized by the reflexed hair points. Female
auricles projecting distinctly into the costa. In Europe, plants have terminal perichaetial buds. Problems may
the species is found in similar situations in the highly rarely arise with forms from shaded habitats, in which
oceanic parts as in the west coast of North America, the hairpoints are absent or so short that they are not
where it is found on Queen Charlotte Islands and adjacent reflexed.
mainland. It is also found (as in C. atrovirens) in the
Alps. 9. Campylopus oerstedianus (Müller Hal.) Mitten,
J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 12: 81. 1869
8. Campylopus introflexus (Hedwig) Bridel, Muscol. Dicranum oerstedianum Müller
Recent., suppl. 4: 72. 1818 Hal., Syn. Musc. Frond. 2: 596.
Dicranum introflexum Hedwig, Sp. 1851
Musc. Frond., 141, plate 29, figs. Plants 1–3 cm, in olive green tufts,
1–7. 1801 lighter above and brownish below,
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Plants 0.5–5 cm, in dense mats, evenly foliate, tomentose. Leaves
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yellowish to olive green, tomen- 4–5 mm, lanceolate, gradually
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tum present or almost absent. narrowed into a subtubulose,
Leaves 4–6 mm, erect-patent when straight, concolorous subula; alar
wet, appressed when dry, lanceo- cells slightly differentiated, reddish or hyaline; basal
late, straight, with entire margins; laminal cells hyaline, rectangular; distal laminal cells
alar cells absent or formed by thin-walled, hyaline to thick-walled, subquadrate to short-rectangular or
reddish, inflated cells; basal laminal cells hyaline, oblique; costa filling half of the leaf width, excurrent in
rectangular, thin-walled, extending higher at margins and a short, hyaline tip, which is longer in perichaetial leaves,
forming a V-shaped area; distal laminal cells incrassate, in transverse section showing adaxial hyalocysts and
shortly rectangular to oblique, chlorophyllose; costa abaxial stereids in groups of 2 cells, abaxially ridged.
filling 1/2–3/4 of leaf width, excurrent in a hyaline hair tip, Specialized asexual reproduction not seen. Sporophytes
which is conspicuously 90° reflexed, in transverse section unknown.
showing adaxial hyalocysts and abaxial stereids, shortly Soil covered rocks; ca. 50 m; N.C.; West Indies
lamellose at back with ribs 1–2 cells high. Specialized (Jamaica); Central America (Costa Rica); Europe (France,
asexual reproduction occasionally by deciduous stem tips. Germany, Greece, Italy).
Seta 7–12 mm, yellowish brown to brownish in age, often Campylopus oerstedianus has been found only once
several sporophytes from the same plant, curved or in the flora area, in the piedmont of North Carolina.
sinuose. Capsule brown, 1.5 mm, slightly asymmetric and The overall distribution is very scattered and suggests a
curved when empty. Calyptra ciliate at base. Spores 12– circum-Tethyan range (margins of the Caribbean and
14 µm. Mediterranean seas). It has been described from Europe
Soil along trails, base of trees, flat roofs of buildings, as C. mildei Schimper. Plants of C. oerstedianus resemble
peat in bogs, sand; 0–200 m; B.C.; Calif., Oreg., Wash.; C. pilifer in habit, with shorter hairpoints. In shady
South America (Argentina, Brazil, Chile); Europe; habitats the hairpoints are sometimes absent. The plants
s Africa; Pacific Islands (New Caledonia, subantarctic are microscopically distinguished by the slightly different
Islands, New Zealand); Australia. shape of the distal laminal cells and the transverse section
Campylopus introflexus occurs in masses in sand dunes of the costa, by the lack of abaxial lamellae on the costa,
along the west coast of North America and throughout smaller adaxial hyalocysts of about the diameter of the
the Southern Hemisphere. The species was introduced median deuter cells, and groups of abaxial stereids with
only 2 instead of 4 stereid cells.
372 DICRANACEAE · Campylopus
10. Campylopus pilifer Bridel, Muscol. Recent., suppl. 4: rectangular; distal laminal cells thick-walled, rectangular,
72. 1818 ca. 4:1; costa filling 1/2–2/3 of leaf width, excurrent, in
Campylopus leucotrichus Sullivant transverse section with large, empty, adaxial hyalocysts
& Lesquereux and abaxial groups of stereids, abaxially smooth.
Specialized asexual reproduction by colorless,
Plants 0.5–3 cm long, in tufts, multicellular, long-cylindric rhizoidal tubers, 300–700 µm
dirty green, olive green, or long, deciduous leaves and small brood leaves produced
yellowish green, darker below, at stem tips. Sporophytes not present in North America.
equally foliate, the fertile ones Bare soil, also base of trees and old pine stumps in
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Fl. Starg. Suppl., 73. 1819 # Plants 1–3 cm, in compact tufts,
light green above, brownish and
Plants 3 mm, gregarious or in #