Sphagnum cribrosum |
Sphagnum flexuosum |
|
---|---|---|
|
sphagnum |
|
Habit | Plants green, light brown to brown. | Plants small to moderate-sized, slender and soft, lax, moderately weak to moderately stiff-stemmed; green, pale yellowish green, yellowish brown, grayish brown or reddish brown; capitulum typically compact and twisted in the middle like a ball of yarn, spreading branches curved giving a pinwheel appearance. |
Stem(s) | leaves triangular-lingulate to lingulate, 0.7–1.3 mm, appressed to stem, apex obtuse to broadly obtuse and erose to somewhat lacerate, hyaline cells efibrillose and nonseptate. |
|
Branches | curved, unranked to less commonly (in wet-grown forms) 5-ranked, leaves not much elongate at distal end. |
|
Branch leaves | ovate-ligulate, apex broad, rounded, and truncate, hyaline cells with 20–40 small (less than 0.25 cell diameter) in mostly 2 rows. |
ovate-lanceolate to broadly ovate-lanceolate, 1.5–2.5 mm, strongly undulate and moderately recurved when dry, straight; margin entire; greater than hyaline cells on convex surface with 1–2 pores per cell at cell apex, on concave surface with round wall thinnings in the cell ends and angles; chlorophyllous cells triangular in transverse section and typically just slightly exposed on the concave surface. |
Sexual condition | dioicous. |
|
Spores | 23–25 µm; moderately to coarsely papillose on both surfaces; proximal laesura approximately 0.5 spore radius. |
|
Branch | fascicles with 2(–3) spreading and 2 pendent branches.; branch stems green but sometimes reddish at proximal end, with cortex enlarged with conspicuous retort cells. |
|
Sphagnum cribrosum |
Sphagnum flexuosum |
|
Phenology | Sporophytes uncommon, capsules mature early to late summer. | |
Habitat | Floating or stranded at margins of shallow acidic lakes and ponds | Forming carpets in poor to medium fens, mostly sedge-fens and mire edge habitat |
Elevation | low elevations | low to moderate elevations |
Distribution |
FL; GA; MD; NC; SC |
CT; IL; IN; MD; ME; MI; MN; NC; NH; NJ; NY; OH; PA; TN; VT; WI; WV; NB; NF; NS; ON; PE; QC; Europe
|
Discussion | Besides having different branch leaf porosity, Sphagnum cribrosum is usually distinguishable from the closely related S. macrophyllum by its paler brown color and distinctly broader and more truncate branch leaves. “Wave forms” of both S. cribrosum and S. macrophyllum, seemingly developed in response to growing in shallow water where wave action is common, can have very odd phenotypes that may look more like Fontinalis than Sphagnum. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Of species in sect. Cuspidata with range and ecology similar to that of Sphagnum flexuosum, S. angustifolium and S. recurvum have rounded stem leaves. In S. angustifolium the stem leaves are more triangular and rarely erose while the branch leaves are narrower and more strongly 5-ranked. Sphagnum recurvum also has narrower and more 5-ranked branch leaves than does S. flexuosum, as well as a much more strongly differentiated stem cortex. In S. flexuosum the branch leaves are only slightly recurved whereas in S. recurvum they are sharply recurved. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 27, p. 61. | FNA vol. 27, p. 68. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | S. floridanum, S. macrophyllum var. floridanum | S. amblyphyllum, S. fallax var. flexuosum, S. flexuosum var. ramosissimum, S. flexuosum var. recurvum, S. recurvum subsp. amblyphyllum, S. recurvum var. amblyphyllum |
Name authority | Lindberg: Eur. Hvitmoss., 74. (1882) | Dozy & Molkenboer: in R. B. van den Bosch et al., Prodr. Fl. Bat. 2(1): 76. (1851) |
Web links |