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dicranoweisia moss

Habit Plants densely tufted, light to dark green, dull.
Stems

0.5–3 cm, erect, forked, with central strand, with rhizoids confined to base of stems and firmly affixed to substratum.

Leaves

lanceolate, flexuose, crisped or curled when dry, 1–3.5 mm;

costa single, subpercurrent, narrow;

margins plane to incurved or recurved, 1- or 2-stratose;

proximal cells elongate, 15–30 µm, smooth;

alar cells with a few enlarged cells on margins, often colored or undifferentiated;

distal cells subquadrate 7–10 µm wide, smooth or with longitudinal cuticular ridges.

Seta

solitary, yellowish, 3–15 mm, smooth.

Sexual condition

autoicous;

pergonial leaves abruptly narrowed to a long or short subula;

perichaetial leaves variable, resembling vegetative leaves or broadly obtuse to acute or short-acuminate.

Capsule

light to dark brown when mature, elliptic to short-cylindric, 0.5–2 mm, smooth to longitudinally wrinkled when dry;

annulus present, of 1–3 rows of cells, deciduous or absent;

operculum rostrate, beak straight or oblique;

peristome single, 16 teeth inserted below darkened cells of mouth, teeth entire to divided at apices, red-brown with hyaline tips.

Calyptra

cucullate, smooth, covering 1/3–1/2 of capsule, entire at base.

Spores

spherical, 15–20 µm, weakly papillose.

Specialized

asexual reproduction sometimes present, multicellular, on abaxial surface, elliptic to short-linear, of 4–10 cells, 1-seriate or with occasional 2-seriate portions, smooth.

Dicranoweisia

Distribution
North America; South America; Europe; Asia; Africa; Pacific Islands (Hawaii, New Zealand); Australia; Antarctica
Discussion

Species ca. 20 (2 in the flora).

Species of Dicranoweisia are usually epiphytic, epixylic, epilithic, or terrestrial and are found widespread throughout the world.

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

Key
1. Leaf margins widely recurved in many leaves; 1-stratose excepting distal margins, cells smooth; alar cells not differentiated.
D. cirrata
1. Leaf margins plane, erect or incurved to weakly and narrowly recurved; 1-stratose proximally and 2-stratose distally, distal cells usually longitudinally striolate (appearing papillose in transverse section); alar cells sometimes noticeably larger than adjacent cells and often colored.
D. crispula
Source FNA vol. 27, p. 395. Treatment author: Wilfred B. Schofield.
Parent taxa Dicranaceae
Subordinate taxa
D. cirrata, D. crispula
Name authority Lindberg ex Milde: Bryol. Siles., 48. 1869 ,
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