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loeskypnum moss

Habit Plants medium-sized or rarely large, yellow-green, golden brown, or coppery brown, often blackish proximally.
Stem(s)

leaves ovate or broadly so, oblong, or obovate, gradually or abruptly narrowed to apex, straight or falcate, strongly concave, not plicate;

base not decurrent or short-decurrent;

margins entire or occasionally sinuate;

apex rounded-apiculate or short- to long-acuminate;

costa single or occasionally 2-fid distally, weak, ending 1/2–9/10 leaf length;

alar cells differentiated, rectangular or short-rectangular, slightly inflated, green to hyaline, walls incrassate, region indistinctly delimited, triangular;

medial laminal cell walls incrassate or strongly incrassate, porose.

Sexual condition

dioicous;

inner perichaetial leaves not plicate;

vaginula naked or occasionally paraphyses 1 or 2.

Capsule

horizontal or occasionally inclined;

annulus not separating;

exostome external surface reticulate basally, margins dentate distally.

Spores

13–21(–23) µm.

Loeskypnum

Distribution
North America; n Eurasia
Discussion

Species 2 (2 in the flora).

Loeskypnum is usually easily recognized by the sparse branching, rather broad, apiculate or rather short-acuminate and strongly concave stem leaves, and the often golden brown or coppery brown color. The plants are somewhat turgid. Microscopic characters aiding in identification are the strongly incrassate cells throughout the gametophyte, the weak and comparatively short costa, the few and only slightly inflated and differentiated alar cells, and axillary hairs that are brownish or yellow-brown when young. The species of this genus share several rhizoid, perichaetial, and sporophyte character states especially with members of Calliergon, Straminergon, Warnstorfia, and, to some degree, Conardia (Amblystegiaceae). Loeskypnum typically occurs in intermediately mineral-rich and nutrient-poor fens, mostly relatively high in relation to the water table.

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

Key
1. Stem leaves falcate, erect-spreading to subimbricate, ovate or broadly ovate, abruptly or gradually narrowed to apex; apices acuminate or short-acuminate, not cucullate.
L. badium
1. Stem leaves straight, ± imbricate, ovate, oblong, or obovate, abruptly narrowed to apex, apices broadly acute, rounded, or apiculate, often cucullate.
L. wickesiae
Source FNA vol. 28, p. 394.
Parent taxa Calliergonaceae
Subordinate taxa
L. badium, L. wickesiae
Name authority H. K. G. Paul: Bryol. Z. 1: 155. (1918)
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