Polytrichum strictum |
Polytrichaceae |
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bog haircap moss, hummock haircap, narrow-leaf haircap, polytrichum moss, slender haircap |
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Habit | Plants slender, green to whitish green, dark brownish with age, in deep, compact tufts. | Plants small, medium to large, densely to loosely caespitose or scattered among other bryophytes, rarely with individual plants scattered on a persistent protonema. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | 6–12(–20) cm, simple, densely matted with wooly whitish to light-brownish tomentum. |
erect, acrocarpous, from a ± developed underground rhizome, simple or rarely branched, bracteate proximally, grading gradually or abruptly to mature leaves. |
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Leaves | 2–5(–6) mm, erect to closely appressed when dry, erect-spreading when moist; sheath oblong-rectangular, brownish, ± abruptly contracted to the blade; blade narrowly lanceolate, acuminate, flat, with sharply infolded margins; marginal lamina 6–7 cells wide, 1-stratose, entire to finely crenulate above, membranous and transparent, abruptly infolded and enclosing the lamellae and overlapping towards the apex; costa toothed abaxially towards the apex, short-excurrent as a short, reddish brown awn; lamellae bluntly crenate in profile, 5–8 cells high, the marginal cells in section pyriform, thick-walled, ending in a thickened knob, end cells of lateral lamellae ovoid and scarcely thickened at the apex; sheath cells 45–80 × 7–10 µm, elongate-rectangular (5–7:1), narrower toward the margin; cells of the marginal lamina transversely elongate, shorter and obliquely oriented towards the margins, very thick-walled and colorless. |
various, with a chartaceous, sheathing base and a divergent, firm-textured blade (polytrichoid), or the whole leaf membranous and sheath not or weakly differentiated, the blade rarely transversely undulate, crisped and contorted when dry; adaxial surface of blade with numerous closely packed longitudinal photosynthetic lamellae across most of the blade, the marginal lamina narrow, or the lamellae restricted to the costa, flanked by a broad, 1 (rarely 2)-stratose lamina, rarely with abaxial lamellae; margins 1(–3)-stratose, entire, denticulate, serrate, or toothed (in Atrichum bordered by linear, thick-walled cells); costa narrow in basal portion, in the blade abruptly broadened and diffuse, smooth or toothed adaxially, rarely with abaxial lamellae, in cross section with a prominent arc of large diameter guide cells and an abaxial stereid band; lamellae entire, finely serrulate, crenulate, or coarsely serrate, the free margin smooth or cuticular-papillose, the marginal cells in cross-section undifferentiated or sharply distinct in size and/or shape from those beneath; transition in areolation from sheath to blade gradual or abrupt, with “hinge-tissue” at the shoulders (except Atrichum and Psilopilum); cells of back of costa (or cells of the membranous lamina) typically in longitudinal rows, ± isodiametric to transversely elongate-hexagonal. |
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Seta | 2–4 cm, yellowish to reddish brown. |
solitary or rarely several from the same perichaetium. |
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Sexual condition | dioicous; perichaetial leaves somewhat longer than the stem leaves, ending in a slender awn. |
dioicous or rarely monoicous; male inflorescence indeterminate, innovating from the center and continuing the growth of the stem, often several successive perigonia per shoot; female inflorescence terminal, perichaetial leaves long-sheathing or not much differentiated. |
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Capsule | 2–3 mm, short-rectangular to almost cubic (1–1.5:1), brownish, sharply 4-angled and prismatic, suberect, becoming horizontal when ripe; peristome 200–230 µm, divided to 0.8, the teeth 64, obtuse. |
obtusely to sharply (2–)4(–6)-angled, with indistinct longitudinal angles or ridges, or terete; hypophysis tapering and indistinct or delimited by a constriction at base of capsule; exothecium smooth, mammillose, or scabrous; stomata present (absent in Atrichum and Pogonatum); peristome pale or strongly pigmented, nematodontous, with a single series of [16–]32–64 rigid, unjointed teeth composed of elongate, fiber-like, sinuate cells, the teeth simple or compound, attached by their tips to the epiphragm (tympanum) covering the capsule mouth. |
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Calyptra | dirty white to light brown, enclosing the capsule. |
cucullate, with a matted felt of hairs arising from its tip and covering all or part of the capsule, or the calyptra sparsely ciliate to smooth. |
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Spores | 7–9(–15) µm. |
minute and echinulate, or larger and finely papillose. |
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Vegetative | reproduction none, or by proliferation of an underground rhizome. |
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Polytrichum strictum |
Polytrichaceae |
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Habitat | Sphagnum bogs, wet heaths and tundra, muskeg, sedge meadows, moist alpine tundra, also on local elevations and on rotten stumps in wet spruce forests | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | low to high elevations | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AK; CA; CO; CT; GA; IA; IL; IN; MA; MD; ME; MI; MN; MT; NC; NH; NJ; NY; OH; OR; PA; RI; UT; VT; WA; WI; WV; WY; AB; BC; MB; NB; NL; NS; NT; NU; ON; PE; QC; SK; YT; South America; e Asia (Russia, Japan); Atlantic Islands (Faroes, Iceland); Greenland; n Asia; n Europe (Scandinavia, Svalbard); Antarctica
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Nearly worldwide |
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Discussion | Polytrichum strictum is widespread in the boreal regions of the Holarctic, and is one of the commonest low arctic representatives of the family (D. G. Long 1985), with survivals southward in relict bogs, for example in northern Indiana, northern Illinois, and northwestern Iowa, also in alpine situations in the eastern mountains to the Carolinas and Georgia. In Nunavut, it is known from Baffin, Bathurst, and Devon islands. Its characteristic habitat is on hummocks in Sphagnum bogs, in deep masses tightly bound together by dirty-white, wooly tomentum, with short, stiffly erect leaves, and cubical capsules, a clear correlation between a distinctive morphology, distribution, and ecology. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Genera 22, species ca. 260 (9 genera, 38 species in the flora). The Polytrichaceae are widely distributed in all climatic zones except the lowland tropics and include many large, common, and familiar North American mosses. These “hair-cap mosses” have no close living relatives, and have a long (but disjunctive) fossil record (Eopolytrichum) from the Late Cretaceous of Georgia, United States (A. S. Konopka et al. 1997). The family is remarkable for the structural complexity of both gametophyte and sporophyte found in many of its members. The stems of robust taxa (Polytrichum) have a conspicuous central strand composed of hydrome and leptome, and traces extending into the leaves; in other genera the central strand is weak and indistinct. The following descriptions use the shorthand term “polytrichoid” for taxa with a growth form and leaves like those of Polytrichum. The best analogy to the polytrichoid leaf is the grass leaf, with a clear distinction between a sheathing base and divergent blade. Typically a wedge-shaped group of transversely elongate, incrassate cells (“hinge tissue”) is present at the shoulders or just above. Most polytrichoid taxa have a hyaline-margined sheath, with a sharply defined border of thin-walled, decolorate cells. The leaves of Atrichum have a slender costa and a broad, membranous lamina. In Bartramiopsis and Lyellia, however, the lamellae are restricted to the “costa” and the broad “lamina” is 2-stratose. In the polytrichoid leaf the distinction between costa and lamina becomes blurred. The conducting strands are confined to a median band, flanked by an ambiguous zone bearing closely packed lamellae but only a few cells in thickness, and a narrow, usually 1-stratose marginal lamina. Gary L. Smith (1971) suggested that lamellae originally covered the adaxial surface of the leaf, and the broad membranous lamina developed as conducting strands and lamellae were restricted to the median portion. As demonstrated by S. O. Lindberg (1868) the form of the marginal cells of the lamellae is often sufficient to distinguish between species of Polytrichaceae. Free-hand sections with a razor blade are adequate in most cases. Sections should be made from ordinary vegetative leaves, in the middle 1/3 (or in polytrichoid leaves, midway between the tip and the base of the blade). Lengths of lamellae should also be scraped from the leaves to be viewed in profile. Median cells of the lamina are best measured individually. The leaf cells are typically aligned in ± regular longitudinal rows, but it is difficult to measure a group of cells and divide to obtain an average cell width since the cells are not aligned transversely. The peristome teeth are unique among mosses in being composed of compact bundles of whole, fiber-like cells. The teeth are not composed of remnants of wall thickenings as in arthrodontous mosses, but form by intrusive growth and elongation of living cells. Accordingly, the peristomes are not homologous. The teeth may be simple (with a single median line), or compound (the outlines of two teeth visible on the outer face of each tooth), although the exact nature of this difference is not well understood. The sinus between these “teeth” may be broad (Oligotrichum), or narrow and obscured (Pogonatum). The height of the peristome is measured from the tips of the teeth to the capsule rim, seen from without. The term “basal membrane” is not used. The generic classification used in this treatment follows that of Gary L. Smith (1971) with few modifications. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 27, p. 139. | FNA vol. 27, p. 121. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | Polytrichaceae > Polytrichum | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | P. affine, P. juniperinum var. affine, P. juniperinum var. gracilius | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Bridel: J. Bot. (Schrader) 1800(1): 286. (1801) | Schwägrichen | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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