Warnstorfia pseudostraminea |
Calliergonaceae |
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warnstorfia moss |
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Habit | Plants green, yellow-green, or brownish. | Plants medium-sized to very large, green, yellowish, brownish, or sometimes red. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stem(s) | leaves narrowly ovate-triangular or ovate, almost straight, slightly falcate, or rarely strongly falcate, concave; margins ± entire or finely denticulate; apex obtuse, acuminate, or blunt, incurved; costa ending 2/3–4/5 leaf length; alar region isodiametric or sometimes transversely triangular, supra-alar cells large, forming oval or rectangular region with alar cells along basal margin. |
leaves straight or falcate, or from straight base suddenly curved, plicate or not; costa single, usually long, or double and usually short; alar cells differentiated or not, often inflated; medial laminal cells linear or short-linear, 1-stratose, smooth. |
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Seta | long, smooth. |
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Capsule | ± horizontal (occasionally inclined in Loeskypnum), cylindric, curved; stomata long-pored; annulus separating or not; operculum conic; peristome perfect; exostome yellow-brown or brownish, external surface ± reticulate proximally, rarely entirely cross striolate, papillose distally, border ± widened at transitional zone in outer peristomial layer pattern, margins dentate or slightly so; endostome basal membrane high, segments long, not or narrowly perforate, cilia nodose. |
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Calyptra | cucullate, smooth. |
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Perichaetia | with inner leaves erect, straight, lanceolate, ovate, oblong, or slightly obovate, plicate or not, costa single, usually well developed; vaginulae with paraphyses or naked. |
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Warnstorfia pseudostraminea |
Calliergonaceae |
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Habitat | Mineral-poor and acid habitats (disturbed), slightly sloping poor fens, ditches, periodically water-filled depressions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | low to high elevations (0-2200 m) (low to high elevations (0-7200 ft)) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AK; CA; MN; WA; WY; BC; NL; ON; Greenland; s South America; Europe; Pacific Islands (New Zealand); Subantarctic Islands |
Nearly worldwide; temperate to subpolar regions and tropical mountains |
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Discussion | Warnstorfia pseudostraminea is usually readily recognizable in the field, where the species gives an impression of an intermediate between W. fluitans and Straminergon stramineum. The species, which is never red, could be confused with 1. W. fluitans or green plants of Sarmentypnum exannulatum, and the distinguishing characters of these species are given in their respective discussions. The genus Calliergidium, in which W. pseudostraminea has been placed, is discussed under Drepanocladus (Amblystegiaceae). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Genera 7, species ca. 22 (7 genera, 20 species in the flora). Genera of Calliergonaceae are fairly well circumscribed based on morphology and molecular data, and are well differentiated from Amblystegiaceae. All species, except sometimes Scorpidium revolvens and S. scorpioides, have a reticulate proximal external surface of the exostome, whereas all members here treated in Amblystegiaceae, except Conardia and Tomentypnum, are cross striolate on the outer basal exostome. Many Calliergonaceae species become translucent red when growing in habitats exposed to sunlight; this is never the case among Amblystegiaceae. Morphological features further characterize the genera Calliergon, Loeskypnum, Sarmentypnum, Straminergon, and Warnstorfia. When shoots grow erect, these are radially rather than distichously branched, except in species that are sparsely branched. Rhizoid initials, and sometimes rhizoids, are frequently found in various parts of the leaf lamina, especially close to the apex. Leaf-borne rhizoid initial cells are easily recognized in being slightly wider than the surrounding laminal cells and lacking the pigments of the latter. Among Amblystegiaceae genera, rhizoid initials and rhizoids are found in leaves only in Conardia, in which they often occur both close to apices and on the abaxial costa, and in Tomentypnum, in which they are found only on the abaxial surface of the costa. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 28, p. 397. | FNA vol. 28, p. 384. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Hypnum pseudostramineum, Calliergidium pseudostramineum, C. pseudostramineum var. hoveyi, C. pseudostramineum var. plesistramineum, Drepanocladus pseudostramineus | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (Müller Hal.) Tuomikoski & T. J. Koponen: Ann. Bot. Fenn. 16: 223. (1979) | Vanderpoorten | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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