Selaginella hansenii |
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Hansen's spike-moss |
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Habit | Plants terrestrial, forming loose to clustered mats. |
Stems | not readily fragmenting, prostrate, upperside and underside structurally different, irregularly forked, branches determinate, tips upturned. |
Leaves | with underside leaves slightly longer and narrower than upperside leaves, otherwise monomorphic, not clearly ranked, tightly appressed, ascending, green or green with red spots, or reddish, linear-lanceolate (underside) to linear-triangular (upperside), (2–)3–4.5 × 0.5–0.6 mm; abaxial ridges present; base abruptly adnate, pubescent (sometimes glabrous); margins ciliate, cilia white to white opaque, strongly appressed and ascending, 0.03–0.1 mm; apex with bristle white to white-opaque, 0.5–1.4 mm (those on underside leaves sometimes 1/4–1/2 longer than those on upperside leaves). |
Strobili | solitary, 5–7 mm; sporophylls ovate-deltate to ovate-triangular, abaxial ridges not prominent, base glabrous, margins short-ciliate, apex bristled. |
Rhizophores | borne on upperside of stems, throughout stem length, 0.25–0.45 mm diam. |
Selaginella hansenii |
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Habitat | Cliffs and rocky slopes or on igneous rock |
Elevation | 330–1350 m (1100–4400 ft) |
Distribution |
CA
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Discussion | Leaf dimorphism in Selaginella hansenii is only slightly and inconsistently expressed; the upperside leaves tend to be more lanceolate, short, and slightly thick, whereas the underside leaves tend to be more linear, longer, and thinner, but in some specimens the leaves are monomorphic. Red leaves are rare within Selaginella subg. Tetragonostachys, otherwise found in the flora only occasionally in S. rupestris. Such leaves are more common in S. steyermarkii Alston from southern Mexico and Guatemala and S. sartorii Hieronymus from Mexico. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 2. |
Parent taxa | Selaginellaceae > Selaginella > subg. Tetragonostachys |
Sibling taxa | |
Name authority | Hieronymus: Hedwigia 39: 301. (1900) |
Web links |