Tetraplodon mnioides |
Splachnaceae |
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entireleaf nitrogen moss, slender cruet-moss |
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Habit | Plants 1–4(–8) cm, light green or yellow-green. | Plants small to medium-sized, green, yellowish, or sometimes brownish, acrocarpous. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stem(s) | leaves soft, homogeneous along stem or larger and crowded at stem apices, ovate-lanceolate, oblong, or spatulate, broad; margins entire to dentate, sometimes bordered; costa single, strong, usually ending before apex; laminal cells rhomboidal, large; basal cells oblong; distal cells oblong or oblong-hexagonal. |
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Leaves | oblong-ovate, concave, 1–2 × 3–5 mm; margins entire; apex abruptly subulate; costa vanishing in subula; distal laminal cells rectangular to oblong-hexagonal, 20 × 35 µm. |
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Seta | stramineous, usually dark red with age, 1–5 cm. |
erect, usually elongate, thin or thick. |
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Sexual condition | autoicous. |
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Capsule | not cleistocarpous, red, dark or black with age, long-ovate; hypophysis somewhat wider than urn distally; stomata over whole of hypophysis; operculum bluntly conic. |
erect, exserted, symmetric or slightly curved, neck elongate, or hypophysis wide and inflated or long and narrow, proximal to urn; columella sometimes exserted; stomata many, guard cells 2; annulus usually absent; operculum convex to conic; peristome usually present, single (double in Splachnum); exostome teeth 8–12 or 16, rarely 2-fid, approximate in groups of 2 and 4, densely and finely papillose. |
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Calyptra | conic-mitrate. |
mitrate or rarely cucullate, smooth, sometimes hairy. |
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Spores | 9–12 µm, smooth or slightly papillose. |
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Perichaetia | with leaves similar, often larger. |
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Tetraplodon mnioides |
Splachnaceae |
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Phenology | Capsules mature summer. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Dung of carnivores, old bones, owl pellets, dry alpine, boreal, arctic habitats | |||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | low to high elevations | |||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AK; ME; MI; MN; NH; NJ; NY; OR; VT; WA; WV; AB; BC; MB; NB; NL; NS; NT; NU; ON; QC; SK; YT; Greenland; n Europe; Asia
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Nearly worldwide; tropical to subpolar regions |
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Discussion | Tetraplodon mnioides is much more common than other species of the genus and is readily distinguished; the plants differ from those of T. angustatus by their larger tufts and longer sporophytes, which are dark red, becoming black with age. Sterile plants of T. mnioides differ from those of T. angustatus by their oblong-ovate, abruptly subulate leaves with entire margins, whereas those of T. angustatus are oblong-lanceolate, gradually subulate, and serrate. The distal laminal cell walls of T. mnioides are rather thin. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Genera 6, species 73 (5 genera, 20 species in the flora). Almost half the species of Splachnaceae possess three noteworthy ecological features. First, their gametophytes are coprophilous, growing on feces, occasionally old bones, and other animal matter. Second, their spores are commonly small and sticky, making them suitable for insect dispersal. Third, the sporophytes of all entomophilous Splachnaceae examined to date produce complex, species-specific odors that are thought to promote the attraction of flies (order Diptera). Although the leaves of Splachnaceae are soft textured and similar in shape to those of Funariaceae, recent phylogenetic studies suggest that Splachnaceae are more closely related to Meesiaceae than to Funariales as previously proposed. Like many species of Meesiaceae, most Splachnaceae grow in moist habitats such as peatlands in temperate and boreal forests. Splachnaceae differs from Meesiaceae in the structure of the capsule, which in Splachnaceae is erect with a mitrate calyptra, whereas in Meesiaceae the capsule is curved with a cucullate calyptra (B. Goffinet et al. 2004). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 28, p. 23. | FNA vol. 28, p. 14. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | Splachnaceae > Tetraplodon | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Splachnum mnioides | |||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (Hedwig) Bruch & Schimper: Bryol. Europ. 3: 215. (1844) | Greville & Arnott | ||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |