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sphagnum

Habit Plants erect to prostrate, extremely variable, capitulum rarely well developed; green, yellowish, light brown, golden brown, reddish brown to dark brown. Plants low, erect or procumbent, loosely tufted; green or more frequently yellowish, orangish brown-red, reddish brown or dark red; capitulum not developed.
Stem(s)

green to dark brown, superficial cortex of 0–3 layers of efibrillose, non-ornamented, enlarged, thin-walled cells;

cells in outer layer aporose or with single round to elliptical wall thinning adjacent to the distal cell wall, visible only with heavy staining.;

stem leaves varying from smaller than to larger than branch leaves;

triangular, ovate to lingulate;

with rounded and sometimes erose apex;

border entire;

hyaline cells rhomboid to S-shaped, non-ornamented, efibrillose to fibrillose, aporose to sometimes porose, non- to multiply septate;

neither surface resorbed.

leaves broadly ovate, 3.5–4 mm, apex rounded and indistinctly toothed;

hyaline cells on convex surface with 10–20 small (2.5–7.5 µm) round pores approximately 1/6 the diameter of the hyaline cells along the commissures, cells on concave surface uniporose in distal end or aporose, sometimes one or a few pores are scattered over the surface of the cells.

Branches

not always clearly dimorphic, spreading and pendent branches very similar.

few, single and short or more commonly none.

Branch leaves

oval, ovate or ovate-lanceolate;

hyaline cells fibrillose, non-ornamented;

convex surface mostly with numerous elliptical to round pores (8–24 per cell) in rows along commissures on convex surface, concave surface with fewer or no pores; chlorophyllous cells elliptical in transverse section, ± equally exposed on both surfaces or slightly more on convex surface, end walls not thickened.

if any, are usually slightly smaller, 2–3 mm, but otherwise identical to the stem leaves.

Sexual condition

dioicous.

dioicous.

Capsule

with few pseudostomata.

immersed in perichaetial leaves, pseudopodium extremely short, without pseudostomata.

Spores

22–41 µm, with or without raised surface sculpture on distal surface;

proximal laesura more than 0.5 spore radius.

25–40 µm; coarsely papillose on both surfaces;

proximal laesura more than 0.5 the length of the spore

Branch

fascicles 1–3 spreading and 0–2(–4) pendent.;

branch stems green, surrounded by 1 layer of efibrillose, non-ornamented, thin-walled, inflated cells, with solitary short-necked retort cells or with conspicuously necked retort cells, interspersed with primarily aporose rectangular-shaped cells.

fascicles, if any, usually only 1 single branch.

Sphagnum sect. Subsecunda

Sphagnum cyclophyllum

Habitat In open grassy savannas, pine barrens, ditches, bare sand in places that are usually submerged for a portion of the year
Elevation low to moderate elevations
Distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica
from FNA
AL; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; NJ; SC; TN; TX; VA; NS; South America
Discussion

Species 99 (13 in the flora).

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

Sporophytes are quite rare in Sphagnum cyclophyllum, which grows associated with S. pylaesii, S. perichaetiale, S. portoricense, and S. lescurii. Sphagnum pylaesii is the only other North American Sphagnum that regularly grows unbranched. The latter species not only lacks the typical sect. Subsecunda branch leaf porosity of S. cyclophyllum but is also much more slender. Sphagnum pylaesii is also much more likely to occur submersed, where it occurs in branched forms, something S. cyclophyllum rarely does. See also discussion under 57. S. microcarpum and 61. S. platyphyllum.

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

Key
1. Stem cortex undifferentiated, superficial layer composed of small thick-walled cells
S. microcarpum
1. Stem cortex differentiated with one or more superficial layers of enlarged thin-walled cells
→ 2
2. Stem cortex of more than 1 superficial layer of enlarged, thin-walled cells
→ 3
2. Stem cortex 1 superficial layer of enlarged, thin-walled cells
→ 7
3. Stem leaves broadly ovate and completely fibrillose, fascicles of 3 branches; terminal bud large, round.
S. platyphyllum
3. Stem leaves lingulate and fibrillose apically; fascicles most 4 or more branches; terminal bud, if any, small
→ 4
4. Stem leaf hyaline cells without parallel septations, usually non-septate; branch leaves 1.2-2 mm.
S. contortum
4. Stem cortex partly one and partly two layers of enlarged thin-walled cells
→ 5
5. Branch leaf convex surface commissural pores equal to or less than 1 µm.
S. orientale
5. Branch leaf convex surface commissural pores 3 µm or more
→ 6
6. At least some stem leaf hyaline cells with 2 or more parallel septations; branch leaves 2.2 mm or longer.
S. carolinianum
6. Stem leaf hyaline cells without parallel septations, leaves less than 2.2 mm
S. inexspectatum
7. Stem simple without branches
→ 8
7. Stems with branches arranged in fascicles
→ 9
8. Hyaline cells of stem and branch leaves with numerous minute, rounded pores on free surface, stem and branch leaves similar and very long (3.5-4 mm), some stem cortical cells with a single wall thinning at the distal end of the cell.
S. cyclophyllum
8. Hyaline cells of stem and branch leaves without pores on superficial surface or with 1-3 small pores in apical ends and angles of cells, stem leaves longer (1.5-2.5 mm) than branch leaves (0.9-1.2 mm), stem cortical cells aporose.
S. pylaesii
9. Hyaline cells of branch leaves without pores on convex surface or with 1-3 small pores in cell apical ends and angles, hyaline cells of branch leaves with thick fibrils that nearly divide the cells into a series of squarish segments.
S. pylaesii
9. Hyaline cells of branch leaves with rows of commissural pores or with 1-5 pores per cell free from the commissures on the convex surface, hyaline cells with thin fibrils
→ 10
10. Stem leaves greater than 1.2 mm, lingulate to ovate-lingulate, generally fibrillose for more than 1/3 their length.
S. lescurii
10. Stem leaves equal to or less than 1.2 mm, triangular to triangular-lingulate, generally fibrillose for 1/3 or less their length
→ 11
11. Branch leaf hyaline cells lacking pores along the commissures but up to 5 small pores free from the commissures on convex surface.
S. oregonense
11. Branch leaf hyaline cells with continuous rows of pores along the commissures and sometimes with few to numerous pores free from the commissures on convex surface
→ 12
12. Branch leaf hyaline cell pores less than or equal to 3 µm, often with 1- 2 rows of pores free from the commissures.
S. perfoliatum
12. Branch leaf hyaline cell pores more than 3 µm, lacking pores free from the commissures
→ 13
13. Stem leaves longer than 0.7 mm; branch leaves equal to or greater than 1.2 mm, mostly straight.
S. inundatum
13. Stem leaves less than 0.7 mm; branch leaves less than 1.2 mm, often subsecund.
S. subsecundum
Source FNA vol. 27, p. 78. FNA vol. 27, p. 80.
Parent taxa Sphagnaceae > Sphagnum Sphagnaceae > Sphagnum > sect. Subsecunda
Sibling taxa
S. affine, S. alaskense, S. andersonianum, S. angermanicum, S. angustifolium, S. annulatum, S. aongstroemii, S. arcticum, S. atlanticum, S. austinii, S. balticum, S. bartlettianum, S. beothuk, S. bergianum, S. brevifolium, S. capillifolium, S. carolinianum, S. centrale, S. compactum, S. contortum, S. cribrosum, S. cuspidatum, S. fallax, S. fimbriatum, S. fitzgeraldii, S. flavicomans, S. flexuosum, S. fuscum, S. girgensohnii, S. henryense, S. imbricatum, S. inexspectatum, S. inundatum, S. isoviitae, S. jensenii, S. junghuhnianum, S. kenaiense, S. lenense, S. lescurii, S. lindbergii, S. macrophyllum, S. magellanicum, S. majus, S. mcqueenii, S. mendocinum, S. microcarpum, S. mirum, S. mississippiense, S. molle, S. obtusum, S. oregonense, S. orientale, S. pacificum, S. palustre, S. papillosum, S. perfoliatum, S. perichaetiale, S. platyphyllum, S. portoricense, S. pulchrum, S. pylaesii, S. quinquefarium, S. recurvum, S. riparium, S. rubellum, S. rubiginosum, S. rubroflexuosum, S. russowii, S. sitchense, S. splendens, S. squarrosum, S. steerei, S. strictum, S. subfulvum, S. subnitens, S. subsecundum, S. subtile, S. talbotianum, S. tenellum, S. tenerum, S. teres, S. torreyanum, S. trinitense, S. tundrae, S. viride, S. warnstorfii, S. wilfii, S. wulfianum
Subordinate taxa
S. carolinianum, S. contortum, S. cyclophyllum, S. inexspectatum, S. inundatum, S. lescurii, S. microcarpum, S. oregonense, S. orientale, S. perfoliatum, S. platyphyllum, S. pylaesii, S. subsecundum
Synonyms S. unranked Subsecunda, S. unranked Cavifolia, S. unranked Comatosphagnum, S. unranked Cyclophylla, S. section Hemitheca
Name authority (Lindberg) Schimper: Syn. Musc. Eur. ed. 2, 2: 843. (1876) Sullivant: in A. Gray, Manual ed. 2, 611. (1856)
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