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dendroalsia moss, plume moss

dendroalsia moss

Habit Plants stiff, wiry and dark green to green when dry, softer and bright green when moist, tail-forming. Plants very large, dark to bright green.
Stem(s)

leaves distinctly 5-ranked along stem, broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, ± plicate, 2–3 × 1–1.5 mm;

base slightly decurrent;

margins entire at base, usually dentate towards apex;

apex acute to acuminate;

costa strong, subpercurrent, percurrent, or barely excurrent, occasionally sinuate, increasingly dentate distally;

basal laminal cells roughly isodiametric, walls incrassate, region filling basal angle of leaves;

medial cells more linear than apical cells, 10–25 × 5–6 µm, walls incrassate;

apical cells isodiametric to oval-rhombic, often prorate, walls incrassate.

with secondary stems erect-ascending;

branches elongate, 1- or 2-pinnate;

paraphyllia and pseudoparaphyllia present.

Secondary stems

10–12(–25) cm, densely foliate, distally pinnate to 2-pinnate and frondiform, more rarely nearly dendroid, circinate and curling downward when dry, opening and orthotropic when moist, proximally stipitate;

lateral or tertiary branches common, ± equal, often bearing smaller (less than 10 mm) quaternary branchlets;

paraphyllia many throughout stem, multiform, seriate or multiseriate to narrowly subulate, often branching;

pseudoparaphyllia investing branch buds, subulate, deltate, or subfoliose, irregularly dentate;

rhizoids many throughout stem.

Leaves

erect to erect-patent when dry, spreading when moist;

margins recurved at base, plane at apex;

medial laminal cells occasionally prorate.

Branch leaves

similar, usually smaller, narrower.

Seta

brown, 0.7–2(–3) mm, straight.

emergent from perichaetial leaves.

Sexual condition

dioicous;

perichaetia lateral, inner leaves apiculate, apiculus toothed.

Capsule

erect-symmetric, barely exserted, brown to red-brown, oblong-ovoid to ovoid, 2–2.5 × 1 mm, plicate when dry;

operculum conic-rostrate;

exostome teeth 16, white, to 0.6 mm, trabeculate, coarsely papillose distally, less so proximally;

endostome basal membrane low, segments persistent, white, as long as exostome teeth, narrowly subulate, slightly carinate, basally connate, cilia absent.

barely exserted;

peristome double;

exostome teeth linear-subulate;

endostome segments slender, strongly papillose.

Calyptra

cucullate, smooth.

Spores

spheric, 15–25 µm, papillose, pale brown.

Primary

stems to 10–15 cm, tightly adhering to substrate, stoloniform, densely rhizoidal.

Perigonia

to 2 mm, leaves deltoid-apiculate to lanceolate-apiculate.

Perichaetia

borne ventrally, on secondary or occasionally tertiary stems, leaves short-deltoid to deltoid-apiculate or longer, sheathing, truncate-apiculate, to 2.5 mm.

Dendroalsia abietina

Dendroalsia

Phenology Capsules mature Mar–Jun.
Habitat Covering whole tree trunks, limbs, and branches, large rock surfaces
Elevation low to moderate elevations (0-1000 m) (low to moderate elevations (0-3300 ft))
Distribution
from FNA
AK; CA; ID; MT; OR; WA; BC; Mexico (Baja California)
[WildflowerSearch map]
w North America; nw Mexico
Discussion

Dendroalsia abietina is an important component of the bryoflora of western North America. Its primary range extends from the Channel Islands and Los Angeles County northward throughout cismontane California, Oregon, and Washington, to Vancouver Island (Georgia Straits) and southwestern British Columbia mostly south of 50˚ north latitude. Southern and northern disjuncts occur on Cedros and Guadalupe islands off the western coast of Baja California, and on Baranof Island near Sitka, Alaska, respectively. Transmontane disjuncts have been reported in some perennially mesic microhabitats, such as cold air traps in Lava Beds National Monument, California, and in the cedar-hemlock-larch ecozone of northern Idaho, northwestern Montana, and southeastern British Columbia (the so-called interior wet zone, an area noted for many maritime disjuncts). Dendroalsia abietina is one of the most common epiphytes throughout its primary range. It is often the dominant epiphyte on Arbutus, Chrysolepis, Lithocarpus, and Quercus bark, covering the entire trunk and leaving little space for competition. Although in southern California D. abietina has been reported as common along the coast, throughout most of its range it usually grows away from the maritime spray zone and more abundantly away from the first coastal ridges inland (D. H. Norris and J. R. Shevock 2004). The species becomes extremely common in the Inner Coast Range and the oak woodlands of Sacramento Valley, southern Oregon, and Willamette Valley.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Species 1.

According to D. H. Norris and J. R. Shevock (2004), Dendroalsia is recognizable when dry as each of the branches curls downward so the whole resembles a clenched fist. When wet, the stems and branches uncurl to form broad, handsome fernlike tails orthotropic to the substrate (usually a tree trunk or vertical rock face).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 28, p. 588. FNA vol. 28, p. 588. Author: Clayton C. Newberry.
Parent taxa Cryphaeaceae > Dendroalsia Cryphaeaceae
Subordinate taxa
D. abietina
Synonyms Neckera abietina Groutia
Name authority (Hooker) E. Britton: in H. G. A. Engler and K. Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 234/235[I,3]: 1214. (1909) E. Britton ex Brotherus: in H. G. A. Engler and K. Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 234/235[I,3]: 1214. (1909)
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