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tortured tortella moss

tortella moss

Habit Plants dull, green, yellow-green or yellow-brown distally, brown proximally, becoming reddish at higher latitudes and altitudes, elongate. Plants small to medium-sized, in loose or dense tufts, mats or compact sods, fragile, dull green, yellowish to dark green distally, black, brown or tan proximally with prominent shining costae.
Stem(s)

leaves rather soft, uniform in size, strongly crisped or contorted with spirally curled tips when dry, flexuose- to widespreading when moist, long-lanceolate to linear-lanceolate, broadly to narrowly concave or nearly plane proximally to more or less keeled in the apical region, (2–)3–6.5(–7) mm;

base somewhat broader than limb, oblong;

margins usually shortly and strongly undulate, evenly crenulate-papillose, gradually subulate-acuminate, apex acumination confluent with the mucro, leaves at the extreme stem apex surmounted by a stout, multicellular mucro;

costa excurrent as a long, smooth or denticulate mucro or short awn, usually composed of 5–10 rhomboidal cells, adaxial cells of the costa variable, costa distal to the leaf base to the distal median region covered by an epidermis of quadrate to short-rectangular (2:1) papillose cells, in the distal adaxial region variously with a narrow or broader central groove of exposed, smooth, elongate (8:1) stereid cells, occasionally the groove conspicuous and extensive;

proximal laminal cells abruptly differentiated from distal cells, hyaline, laxly thin-walled;

distal laminal cells 1-stratose, quadrate, 7–10(–13) µm wide, marginal cells undifferentiated.

leaves cirrhate-crispate to incurved when dry, spreading to recurved when moist, elongate-oblong to linear-lanceolate or linear-subulate, widest at or near the base;

base hyaline, oblong, erect;

margins plane to incurved distally, generally entire and minutely crenulate by projecting papillae, but often slightly or irregularly scalloped by indentations at points of laminal weakness, occasionally somewhat to strongly undulate, rarely with a border of elongate, clear, smooth cells in one series beyond midleaf, gradually tapering distally or more or less abruptly narrowed;

apex acute or obtuse, cucullate or concave, with an apiculus, mucro or short subula;

costa strong, percurrent to short-excurrent, adaxial and abaxial epidermal cells often present, often interrupted, adaxial and abaxial stereid bands and 1 layer of median guide cells present, hydroid strand occasionally present;

proximal cells enlarged, laxly long-rectangular, thin-walled, hyaline, occasionally brown and rather thick-walled, smooth, abruptly differentiated from the green cells distally or gradual in transition, limit of the proximal region usually appears as a V, sometimes a U, often extending distally up each leaf margin as a short or elongated border;

distal laminal cells medially and distally rounded-hexagonal, chlorophyllose, frequently obscured by numerous, dense, C-shaped papillae on both surfaces.

Seta

0.9–2.7(–3.5) cm.

1(–2) per perichaetium, yellow or reddish proximally with age, to 3 cm, erect, smooth.

Sexual condition

dioicous, but seldom fruiting; perigoniate plants rare;

perigonia apparently few per stem, inner perigonial bracts ovate and abruptly apiculate, scarcely longer than the antheridia, 0.5 mm; perichaetiate plants common;

perichaetia numerous on the stem;

perichaetial leaves differentiated even in unfertilized perichaetia, slender and erect at the base, long, 5–5.5 mm, somewhat sheathing, distal part, consisting mostly of costa, setaceous-subulate, erect, in fertile plants, stiff and slightly flexuose, distinct and conspicuous above the tightly crisped cauline leaves when dry.

dioicous, occasionally autoicous;

perigonia terminal, short-foliose to gemmate or as stalked buds in leaf axils of perichaetiate plants;

perichaetia terminal, leaves not or little differentiated, or distinct and long-setaceous.

Capsule

1.5–3.3 mm;

annulus not vesiculose;

operculum 1.5–2 mm;

peristome teeth long and spirally wound 2 or 3 times, 1.1–1.4 mm.

erect and symmetric or slightly inclined, yellow to reddish brown, darker red or brown at mouth, elliptic to cylindric, more or less wrinkled-plicate when dry and empty;

annulus sometimes present, of 1–4 rows of vesiculose cells, persistent;

operculum conic or long-rostrate, half as long as the urn or longer, straight or inclined;

peristome orange-red, single, with a low basal membrane, of 32 filiform rami joined at the base into 16 pairs, twisted counterclockwise or merely obliquely inclined, branched-spiculose, rarely nearly smooth.

Calyptra

cucullate, smooth.

Spores

8–12(–20) µm, yellowish brown, moderately coarsely to finely papillose to nearly smooth.

Specialized

asexual reproduction none except possibly through fragility of the lamina in some populations, or weakness toward the apex.

asexual reproduction at the stem apex occasional, by deciduous or fragile propaguloid leaf tips, or by deterioration of fragile leaves along zones of laminal weakness.

Tortella tortuosa

Tortella

Distribution
North America; Mexico; Central America; Europe; Asia; n Africa; Atlantic Islands (Iceland)
[WildflowerSearch map]
Nearly worldwide
Discussion

Varieties ca. 20 (3 in the flora).

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

Species 53 (7 in the flora).

Trichostomum is similar to Tortella in leaf shape and margin flexion, but has distal laminal cells differentiated from the proximal cells in a line straight across the leaf base or in a low, poorly defined U shape, i.e., straight across but with some smooth, hyaline, elongated proximal cells extending up the leaf margins distal to the leaf shoulder. The proximal-cell line of differentiation usually forms a distinct V shape in Tortella. The peristomes of Trichostomum are erect, often short and frequently smooth, whereas those of Tortella are long and twisted generally 2–3 times (only slightly so in T. flavovirens) and densely spiculose in noncleistocarpous species (see R. H. Zander 1993). In much of the literature the peristomes of Tortella are described as papillose, when they are actually spiculose.

Pleurochaete does not have the V-shaped area of differentiated hyaline proximal echlorophyllose cells as with Tortella, but has a median area of gradually differentiated proximal cells and a strong border of several rows of cells contrasting with both laminal and proximal cells in being abruptly longer, thinner-walled, smooth and without chlorophyll. Pleurochaete also has perichaetia, in addition to perigonia, borne laterally on short branches on the main axis of the plant.

Species in Weissia are similar to Tortella by the incurving leaf margins (generally strongly and sharply incurved throughout the leaf length) with a tendency toward cucullation in the leaf apex. The proximal cells of some Weissia species may extend slightly up the margins, as in species of Trichostomum, and most especially, Weissia jamaicensis resembles a Tortella by a proximal region with a V shape. In the following treatment, great emphasis has been put on the cross section of the distal region of the leaf in delimiting taxa and for discussing relationships.

Excluded Species:

Tortella nitida (Lindberg) Brotherus

Tortella nitida has been ascribed to the flora area by I. M. Haring (1938) and S. Flowers (1973) among others. The specimens on which those reports were based have been suggested to be a variant of T. tortuosa by H. A. Crum and L. E. Anderson (1981), who also stated that material cited as T. nitida by Haring was in fact either T. fragilis or T. tortuosa, while material from Utah, described by Flowers, was not seen by them. A few specimens labeled T. nitida from various herbaria in North America were in fact one or the other of those two species. However, the specimens cited by Haring were variously either T. tortuosa var. fragilifolia or T. alpicola, and of the two cited for Utah by Flowers, the one available for study was T. alpicola. None of the three specimens cited by Haring was T. tortuosa or T. fragilis. Tortella nitida, a European species, has proximal cells gradually, not abruptly, differentiated from the laminal cells, a costa shining on the abaxial leaf surface with no distinctive subulate propaguloid leaf apex, and leaf cells to 10 µm wide. Its leaves are usually broadly lanceolate to almost oblong-ligulate, whereas those of all of the taxa just cited are lanceolate to linear-lanceolate. Only T. alpicola and Trichostomum tenuirostre are like it in its laminal fragility and stem central strand.

Tortella mollissima E. B. Bartram

The collection reported as Tortella mollissima by P. L. Redfearn Jr. (1969) is Trichostomum tenuirostre. R. H. Zander (1994g) has made Tortella mollissima (with a Mexican type) a synonym of Pseudosymblepharis schimperiana (Paris) H. A. Crum, a species of Mexico, Central America, and South America.

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

Key
1. Plants red-green, appearing black proximally, densely foliose with a thick apical coma, leaf bases hidden; stems appearing atomentose but tomentum hidden in the bases of branch innovations; leaves not fragile, intact; leaves often strongly squarrose-recurved when wet, plane, not undulate; proximal laminal cells thick-walled and brownish, intergrading in shape and size with the distal cells, which are often nonpapillose in the area of merger; leaves broadly concave in section; costa at midleaf exposed adaxially by as much as four stereid cells
var. arctica
1. Plants green or yellow-green, appearing brown proximally, loosely foliose, some leaf bases exposed, only slightly comose at stem apex; stems conspicuously tomentose; leaves fragile or not, erect- to erect-spreading when wet; undulate or plane; proximal laminal cells thin-walled and hyaline, sharply differentiated in shape and size from the papillose distal cells, which are papillose in the area of contact; leaves keeled in section, costa in apical region exposed adaxially by up to 2 stereid cells in width or completely covered with an adaxial epidermis of quadrate papillose cells
→ 2
2. Leaves in tight, complex spirals when dry, appearing soft or lax throughout the stem length, not fragile or erose, leaf tips nearly all present; conspicuously undulate; leaf cross section without 2-stratose areas beside the costa, the lamina uniformly 1-stratose, lamina intact, the costa always differentiated into guide cells, stereids and epidermal cells, adaxial stereid layer never disappearing toward the apex, adaxial epidermal layer typically absent apically in a medial groove to two stereid cells in width.
var. tortuosa
2. Leaves in loose, simple spirals or once circinate when dry, appearing firm or rigid, often fragile and erose, leaf tips often absent; inconspicuously undulate, especially when dry; leaf cross section with 2-stratose areas beside the costa, the lamina irregularly 2-stratose in patches, lamina tattered, costa occasionally appearing undifferentiated in apical region of the leaf, adaxial stereid layer occasionally disappearing toward the apex, epidermal layer may be continuous throughout the leaf length.
var. fragilifolia
1. Leaves oblong-lanceolate or elliptical, apex broadly acute to obtuse, sometimes cucullate
→ 2
1. Leaves narrowly short to long- or linear-lanceolate, not cucullate or obtuse, apex narrowly acute, tapering to an acuminate point, sometimes apex very long, with a long, setaceous point
→ 5
2. Autoicous, nearly always fruiting; distal margins plane to erect, apex broadly acute; distal leaf cells about 6-7 µm; central strand present; cells on adaxial surface of the costa quadrate and papillose throughout most of its length; stems short; plants typically rosulate, densely foliose.
T. humilis
2. Dioicous, seldom fruiting; distal margins incurved to strongly or variably cucullate at the apex, apex obtuse; distal leaf cells 7-11(-14) µm; central strand present or absent; cells on adaxial surface of the costa quadrate and papillose throughout most of their length or mostly or entirely elongate and smooth; stems elongate; plants loosely foliose
→ 3
3. Stem central strand present; costa with adaxial epidermis: areas on the adaxial surface of the costa with quadrate papillose cells; leaf apex variably somewhat cucullate, acute or obtuse with apical margins incurved; leaves flat in the leaf middle, keeled distally; fertile perichaetial leaves not much differentiated; mosses exclusively of coastal North Carolina south to Florida and west to Texas.
T. flavovirens
3. Stem central strand absent; costa without adaxial epidermis: adaxial surface of the costa with smooth, elongate cells throughout the leaf length; leaf apex distinctly cucullate, occasionally acute, leaves tubulose; fertile perichaetial leaves conspicuously differentiated, with subulate tips; mosses of the Great Lakes region and north
→ 4
4. Leaf cells 11-12 µm or less, stems orange to greenish yellow-brown, leaves deep yellow or orange in KOH; leaves irregularly or uniformly twisted on the stem; leaf apices usually cucullate to narrowly acute, not deciduous; leaves in section usually keeled at the costa, margins incurved; rock crevices or unconsolidated alluvial sediments near water.
T. inclinata
4. Leaf cells averaging 14 µm; stems dark green to brown, leaves green in KOH; leaves erect, twisted only at the stem tips; leaf apices variable, usually acute to acuminate, never uniformly cucullate, frequently with a narrowed apical deciduous point; leaves in section broadly tubulose; limestone pavements with thin soil cover in the Great Lakes region.
T. rigens
5. Leaves with distinctive apical propaguloid modifications, leaf apices regularly fallen
→ 6
5. Leaves without apical propaguloid modifications although some apices may be somewhat fragile
→ 7
6. Stems 1-5 cm, coarsely tomentose; central strand absent; distal leaves to 7 mm, densely crowded, rigid, with patches of elongated, nonpapillose cells on distal leaf margins of young leaves at the stem apex; leaf cells 10-12 µm; lamina proximal to subula 2-stratose; apical propagula falling in a single rigid unit; subulate limb 2- to multistratose.
T. fragilis
6. Stems 0.5 to 1.5 cm, scarcely or not tomentose; central strand present; distal leaves 1.5-2 mm, sparse, soft, leaf tips without differentiated marginal cells; leaf cells 14 µm; lamina 1-stratose throughout; propaguloid leaves and apical propagula articulated by periodic constrictions, falling in several pieces; leaves 2-stratose only in patches or along costa distally.
T. alpicola
7. Stems with central strand, leaf cells ca. 14 µm.
T. alpicola
7. Stems without central strand, or this rare, leaf cells to 14 µm but often less
→ 8
8. Leaves tubulose, margins broadly incurved; most distal laminal cells 14 µm; quadrate, papillose adaxial cells on the surface of the costa absent throughout the leaf length to a width of two or three cells in section; leaf apices deciduous; limestone pavements in the Great Lakes region.
T. rigens
8. Leaves plane to canaliculate, margins plane to erect; distal laminal cells seldom attaining 12 µm, usually less; quadrate, papillose adaxial cells on the surface of the costa present in the median leaf region or higher; of general temperate to Arctic distribution.
T. tortuosa
Source FNA vol. 27, p. 504. FNA vol. 27, p. 498. Author: Patricia M. Eckel.
Parent taxa Pottiaceae > subfam. Trichostomoideae > Tortella Pottiaceae > subfam. Trichostomoideae
Sibling taxa
T. alpicola, T. flavovirens, T. fragilis, T. humilis, T. inclinata, T. rigens
Subordinate taxa
T. tortuosa var. arctica, T. tortuosa var. fragilifolia, T. tortuosa var. tortuosa
T. alpicola, T. flavovirens, T. fragilis, T. humilis, T. inclinata, T. rigens, T. tortuosa
Synonyms Tortula tortuosa Mollia subg. T.
Name authority (Hedwig) Limpricht: Laubm. Deutschl. 1: 604. (1888) (Lindberg) Limpricht: Laubm. Deutschl. 1: 599. (1888)
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