Hypnum cupressiforme |
Hypnum circinale |
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cypress-leaf claw-moss, cypress-leaf plaitmoss, hypnum moss |
coiled-leaf claw-moss, coiled-leaf moss, hypnum moss |
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Habit | Plants small to large, rusty green, golden green, yellow-green, or pale green. | Plants small, light gray-green to golden green or dark green. | ||||||||||||||||
Stem(s) | 1–8+ cm, pale to yellowish green, brown with age, creeping to erect, complanate-foliate or not, irregularly pinnate to nearly unbranched, attached shoots often regularly pinnate, branches 1–3 cm; hyalodermis absent, central strand poorly developed; pseudoparaphyllia filamentous, 1–3-seriate at base. |
leaves falcate-secund to circinate, ovate- to triangular-lanceolate, gradually narrowed to apex, 1.5–2.2 × 0.5–0.7 mm; base slightly decurrent, often asymmetric with one side somewhat to strongly auriculate; margins plane, rarely slightly recurved on one side, serrulate; acumen long-attenuate; costa indistinct; alar cells few, subquadrate to rounded-triangular, region fairly well defined, 2–5 cells in marginal row; basal laminal cells broader than medial cells, golden yellow, walls porose; medial cells 60–80(–100) × 4–5 µm. |
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Leaves | strongly imbricate, not to decidedly falcate-secund, ovate to oblong-lanceolate, gradually or abruptly narrowed to apex, 1.5–2 × 0.5–0.8 mm; base not decurrent, not auriculate; margins recurved to plane proximally, serrulate (sometimes weakly) distally, occasionally nearly entire; acumen slender; costa double and short or obscure; alar region well defined, basalmost cells larger, sometimes hyaline, yellowish or brownish; basal laminal cells shorter, wider than medial cells, not pigmented, walls not pitted; medial cells (50–)60–80 × 3–4(–5) µm. |
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Branch leaves | 1.1–1.5 × 0.3–0.4 mm; margins more strongly serrulate. |
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Seta | reddish, 1–2.5(–3) cm. |
reddish, 0.6–1.5(–2) cm. |
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Sexual condition | dioicous; inner perichaetial leaves oblong-lanceolate, margins serrulate distally, costa obscure. |
dioicous or phyllodioicous; inner perichaetial leaves oblong-lanceolate, margins serrulate distally, apex slender. |
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Capsule | slightly inclined, reddish, cylindric, 1.8–2.5(–2.8) mm; annulus 1–3-seriate; operculum conic to rostrate; endostome cilia 1–2(–3). |
oblique to horizontal, reddish, ovoid to ovoid-oblong, 0.8–1.5 × 0.5–0.7 mm; annulus 1- or 2-seriate; operculum conic-apiculate; endostome cilia 1 or 2. |
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Hypnum cupressiforme |
Hypnum circinale |
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Phenology | Capsules mature Jan–Feb. | |||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Lowland to subalpine coniferous forests, epiphytic on tree trunks, decaying logs, rock | |||||||||||||||||
Elevation | low to moderate elevations (0-1500 m) [low to moderate elevations (0-4900 ft)] | |||||||||||||||||
Distribution | Nearly worldwide; except Antarctica
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AK; CA; ID; MT; OR; WA; AB; BC
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Discussion | Varieties 9 (4 in the flora). Hypnum cupressiforme is an extremely polymorphic species, reflected in the more than 60 varieties that have been described. The species has a wide ecological amplitude as well as a nearly cosmopolitan distribution and is found in all climatic regions except the Antarctic. Taxonomic features reliable in most other species of Hypnum are plastic in H. cupressiforme. Within a single clone, it is possible to sort out several named varieties. Variety lacunosum Bridel was noted by H. Ando (1989) to be weakly differentiated in North America, and he tentatively cited specimens from Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and South Dakota. Ando noted that var. lacunosum typically is robust, thick-complanate to julaceous, with leaves almost straight to weakly falcate and abruptly narrowed to a short acumen, but the North American material is not robust and is therefore problematic. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Hypnum circinale is easily identified by the often asymmetric stem leaves bearing a long-attenuate serrulate point, with one side auriculate with usually pigmented alar cells, and the small sporangia that mature in January or February and produce sporophytes between September and December. Its closest affinities are with the east Asian H. tristoviride (Brotherus) Paris, which it strongly resembles in vegetative characters. In eastern North America, H. andoi resembles some forms of H. circinale in size and appearance, but the leaf bases, especially the nature of the alar cells and auriculation in H. circinale (absent in H. andoi) are reliable distinguishing features. The plants tend to be larger on humid logs than on tree trunks and rock and are closely affixed to the substrate by rhizoids; the pseudoparaphyllia are usually terminated by an elongate cell or 1-seriate tip of 2–4 cells; and the laminal cell walls are porose. When dioicous, the antheridial plants are similar to the archegonial; when phyllodioicous, the dwarf males are epiphytic on archegonial plants. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 28, p. 537. | FNA vol. 28, p. 536. | ||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Stereodon cupressiformis | H. squoitei, Rhaphidostegium recurvans, Stereodon circinalis | ||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Hedwig: Sp. Musc. Frond., 291. (1801) | Hooker: Musci Exot. 2: plate 107. (1819) | ||||||||||||||||
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