Bryum argenteum |
Bryum argenteum var. majus |
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silver bryum, silver-moss, silvergreen bryum moss, silvery thread moss |
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Habit | Plants gregarious or in dense mats, white-green to silver-green. | Plants green. | ||||||||
Stems | 0.2–1 cm, strongly rounded julaceous or sometimes gemmiform. |
0.5–1 cm, loosely julaceous. |
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Leaves | erect when moist, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, somewhat concave, 0.3–1(–1.2) mm; base green; margins rarely recurved proximally or plane distally; apex broadly rounded to acute, not cucullate, hyaline in distal 1/4–1/2 of leaf or rarely nearly entirely green; costa not reaching apex, apiculus present, sometimes short or nearly absent, hyaline, irregularly incurved when dry; proximal laminal cells quadrate or short-rectangular, 12–18 µm wide, 1–2:1; distal cells short- or elongate-hexagonal, (30–)40–80 × 10–15 µm, (1–)3–5:1, walls thin or somewhat thickened, not distinctly incrassate. |
longer than broad, hyaline near apex; costal apiculus long; distal laminal cells elongate-hexagonal, 3–4:1. |
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Seta | brown to red-brown, 1–2 cm. |
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Capsule | red to red-brown, ovate, 2–3 mm; hypophysis differentiated, somewhat thickened. |
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Spores | 8–15 µm. |
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Specialized | asexual reproduction by leaf axil bulbils, leafy, small. |
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Bryum argenteum |
Bryum argenteum var. majus |
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Phenology | Capsules unknown. | |||||||||
Habitat | Shaded moist soil, disturbed habitats | |||||||||
Elevation | low to moderate elevations (0-500 m) (low to moderate elevations (0-1600 ft)) | |||||||||
Distribution |
Nearly worldwide
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ME; MO; NH; w Europe |
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Discussion | Varieties ca. 30 (3 in the flora). Bryum argenteum is perhaps the most widespread and distinctive moss in the world, although in many regions it is found primarily in urban or other heavily disturbed sites and is mostly absent from native undisturbed habitats in the tropics. There are about 15 silver-white species described, with species definitions based on a combination of one of three or four different basic gametophyte morphologies combined with subtle differences in the sporophytes. However, much of the gametophyte variability in the complex is also exhibited by B. argenteum itself, thus confusing species-level identifications. This complex is urgently in need of worldwide molecular and morphological studies. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Variety majus is poorly understood, and it may be more widely distributed. The pale green, loosely imbricate stems with hyaline apiculus are reminiscent of Plagiobryum zieri, but that species has wide elongate laminal cells throughout the leaf, a pinkish coloration, and arctic-alpine distribution. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 28, p. 126. | FNA vol. 28, p. 126. | ||||||||
Parent taxa | Bryaceae > Bryum | Bryaceae > Bryum > Bryum argenteum | ||||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||||||
Name authority | Hedwig: Sp. Musc. Frond., 181. (1801) | Schwagrichen: Sp. Musc. Frond. Suppl. 1(2): 88. (1816) | ||||||||
Web links |