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dicranum moss, wavy broom moss, wavy-leaf heron's-bill moss, wavy-leaf moss

bonjean's dicranum moss, crisped heron's-bill moss

Habit Plants in loose tufts, light green, glossy. Plants in loose tufts, yellow to yellowish green, glossy.
Stems

4–15 cm, densely tomentose with whitish or reddish rhizoids.

2–8 cm, scarcely tomentose with whitish to reddish brown rhizoids.

Leaves

erect to spreading, ± flexuose, little changed when dry, strongly undulate, (5.5–)7–9.5(–10.5) × 1–2 mm, lanceolate, concave proximally, keeled above, acute;

margins strongly toothed in the distal half;

laminae 1-stratose;

costa ending before apex, occupying ca. 1/16–1/8 of leaf base, strong, with two toothed ridges distally on abaxial surface, with one row of guide cells, two stereid bands, adaxial epidermal layer of cells not differentiated, abaxial layer with a few cells enlarged;

cell walls between lamina cells not bulging;

leaf cells smooth;

alar cells 2-stratose, well-differentiated, not extending to costa;

proximal laminal cells elongate, pitted, (45–)78–129(–156) × (5–)9–10(–14) µm;

distal laminal cells shorter, sinuose, pitted, (42–)64–68(–115) × (4–)9–10(–13)µm. Sexual condition pseudomonoicous;

dwarf male plants on stem rhizoids of female plants;

interior perichaetial leaves abruptly long-acuminate, convolute-sheathing.

erect-spreading, sometimes nearly appressed, flexuose, little changed when dry, undulate or rugose, (3.5–)4–5.5(–6) × 1–1.5 mm, flat to ± concave proximally, subtubulose above, from a lanceolate base to a short, broadly acute apex, distal part of stem often with ovate, short-subulate, blunt leaves;

margins serrate in the distal half;

laminae 1-stratose;

costa ending just before the apex, sometimes with two poorly developed toothed ridges above on abaxial surface, 1/13–1/8 the width of the leaves at base, row of guide cells, two thin stereid bands, adaxial epidermal layer of cells not differentiated, the abaxial layer with a few (usually 2) cells differentiated in distal part of the leaves;

cell walls between lamina cells not bulging;

leaf cells smooth;

alar cells 2-stratose, well-differentiated, sometimes extending to costa;

proximal laminal cells long, sinuose, pitted, (28–)47–71(–113) × (5–)9–11(–14) µm;

distal laminal cells short-linear, sinuose, pitted, (25–)36–51(–73) × (5–)8–14(–20) µm. Sexual condition pseudomonoicous;

dwarf males on rhizoids of female plants;

interior perichaetial leaves abruptly long-acuminate, convolute-sheathing.

Seta

1.5–4 cm, usually aggregate, 3–6 per perichaetium, brown or reddish brown.

2.5–3.5 cm, solitary, rarely two per perichaetium, yellowish brown to reddish brown.

Capsule

2–3.5 mm, arcuate, inclined to horizontal, furrowed when dry, yellowish brown or reddish brown;

operculum 2–4 mm.

2.5–3 mm, arcuate, inclined to horizontal, striate when dry, yellow-brown;

operculum 1.7–3 mm.

Spores

12–24 µm.

14–28 µm.

Dicranum polysetum

Dicranum bonjeanii

Phenology Capsules mature spring. Capsules mature spring.
Habitat Commonly on humus, soil over acidic or calcareous rock, and decaying wood in deciduous or more often coniferous forests, occasionally in bogs, fens, and swamps Mainly in eutrophic fens, sometimes on calcareous soil or rock
Elevation 10-2100 m (0-6900 ft) 60-1300 m (200-4300 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AK; CO; CT; IA; ID; IL; IN; KY; MA; MD; ME; MI; MN; MO; MT; NC; ND; NH; NJ; NY; OH; OR; PA; SD; TN; VA; VT; WA; WI; WV; WY; AB; BC; MB; NB; NF; NS; NT; NU; PE; QC; SK; YT; Europe; Asia
[WildflowerSearch map]
from FNA
AK; ID; MA; ME; MI; OH; OR; PA; VT; WA; WI; WY; AB; BC; MB; NF; NS; NT; ON; PE; QC; SK; Greenland; Europe; Asia
Discussion

W. L. Peterson (1979) recorded Dicranum polysetum from Nunavut. It is one of the largest, most conspicuous, and most easily recognized species in the genus in North America. The species is immediately recognized by the large stems, 4–15 cm, with a dense mat of whitish or reddish tomentum, giving the stems a thickened appearance, by the shiny, strongly undulate, wide-spreading leaves with margins strongly toothed in the distal half and by the clustered sporophytes (3–6 per perichaetium). Microscopically, the species is readily distinguished by the elongate, abundantly pitted cells throughout the leaf and by the toothed ridges on the abaxial surface of the costa in the distal part of the leaf. Dicranum polysetum is one of the few species in North America that has no apparent intergradations with any other species of the genus. It is common in southeastern Canada, northeastern United States, and the Canadian Rocky Mountains, where it extends south to Wyoming and Colorado, occurring in both states in a small number of localities. It is rare west of the Rockies, where it is known from only a few localities in northwestern Montana, southern Idaho and northeastern Washington and Oregon.

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

Dicranum bonjeanii was recorded from Maine by B. H. Allen (1998b). It is difficult to distinguish from the myriad forms of the polymorphic D. scoparium. Indeed, few of the many herbarium collections from North America named D. bonjeanii are actually that species or at least what is known as that species. It has been noted before (R. R. Ireland 1982) that it may be merely an enviromental form growing in a calcareous, often hydric habitat. Most Europeans (e.g., A. J. E. Smith 1978; E. Nyholm 1986+, fasc. 1) recognize the species as it occurs in Europe, and some that come to North America to collect (e.g., R. K. Tuomikoski et al. 1973) find the species to be distinct on this continent. However, H. A. Crum and L. E. Anderson (1981) and other North American bryologists have synonymized the species with D. scoparium. D. Briggs (1965), who cultivated and studied British plants of both D. bonjeanii and D. scoparium under controlled environmental conditions, found that while they show wide intraspecific variation, especially in regard to the leaf habit and undulation, and thought that they should be kept as separate taxa because each maintains a distinctive array of gametophytic characters. Also, both species are distinctive ecologically: D. bonjeanii prefers eutrophic fens, whereas D. scoparium usually grows in decidedly dry to mesic woodlands, on soil, humus, humus over rock, stumps and logs, tree bases, etc.

Dicranum bonjeanii is best known by its glossy, mostly erect, nearly straight, undulate leaves with broadly acute apices, weakly developed marginal teeth and, what is most important, two poorly developed ridges present only near the leaf apex on the abaxial surface of the costa. The two ridges on the costa, best seen in cross section, will distinguish the species most of the time from D. scoparium which usually has four ridges on its costae. Its preference for eutrophic fens and other calcareous habitats, while avoiding acid substrates, is important from an ecological standpoint and helps give a clue to the identity of the species.

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

Source FNA vol. 27, p. 401. FNA vol. 27, p. 404.
Parent taxa Dicranaceae > Dicranum Dicranaceae > Dicranum
Sibling taxa
D. acutifolium, D. bonjeanii, D. brevifolium, D. condensatum, D. drummondii, D. elongatum, D. flagellare, D. fragilifolium, D. fulvum, D. fuscescens, D. groenlandicum, D. howellii, D. leioneuron, D. majus, D. montanum, D. muehlenbeckii, D. ontariense, D. pallidisetum, D. rhabdocarpum, D. scoparium, D. spadiceum, D. spurium, D. tauricum, D. undulatum, D. viride
D. acutifolium, D. brevifolium, D. condensatum, D. drummondii, D. elongatum, D. flagellare, D. fragilifolium, D. fulvum, D. fuscescens, D. groenlandicum, D. howellii, D. leioneuron, D. majus, D. montanum, D. muehlenbeckii, D. ontariense, D. pallidisetum, D. polysetum, D. rhabdocarpum, D. scoparium, D. spadiceum, D. spurium, D. tauricum, D. undulatum, D. viride
Synonyms D. rugosum
Name authority Swartz: Monthly Rev., ser. 2, 34: 538. (1801) De Notaris: in D. Lisa, Elenc. Musch., 29. (1837)
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