Sphagnum mirum |
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Habit | Plants fairly slender to moderate-sized, green; forming low dense hummocks. |
Stem(s) | leaves generally longer than branch leaves, 1.1–1.7 mm, lingulate to lingulate-spathulate, hyaline cells mostly non-septate. |
Branches | terete. |
Branch leaves | 1–1.4 mm, broadly ovate, with a narrow involute tip; hyaline cells only slightly bulging on either surface, in proximal half of leaf aporose on convex surface and with large faint pores on concave surface; internal commissural walls distinctly papillose; chlorophyllous cells elliptical to elliptical-triangular in transverse section, enclosed on both surfaces with the widest part in the leaf middle. |
Sexual condition | dioicous. |
Spores | ca. 31 µm, ornamented by small somewhat amalgamated granulae. |
Branch | fascicles of 2 spreading and 1–2 hanging branches.; branch stems with 1–2 layers of cortical cells. |
Sphagnum mirum |
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Phenology | Sporophytes abundant, capsules mature August. |
Habitat | Ecology poorly known but probably quite minerotrophic |
Elevation | low elevations |
Distribution |
AK |
Discussion | Sphagnum mirum has only been recently discovered and so far is known only from its type locality, where it was growing in a fen mixed with S. teres. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 27, p. 58. |
Parent taxa | |
Sibling taxa | |
Name authority | Flatberg & Thingsgaard: Bryologist 106: 501. (2003) |
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