|
BFNA Title: Ptilium |
|
PTILIUM -
Hypnaceae W. B. Schofield XXX. PTILIUM De
Notaris, Comment. Soc. Crittogamol. Ital. 283 [Cronac. Briol. Ital. 2:
17.] 1867 *
[Greek ptilo-, feather, alluding to the plume-like growth form] Hypnum sect. Ptilium Sullivant in A. Plants medium-sized, forming loose mats of suberect to ascending
shiny yellowish green to golden regularly pinnate shoots. Stems
3--10 cm, with branches 0.3--1.5 cm arising at right angles; main stem tips
usually hooked at apex, branches hooked at tip or attenuate. Leaves
of main stem squarrose, 2--3 mm, strongly plicate, broadly ovate, tapering to
tip; branch leaves 1--2 mm, oblong-lanceolate, tapering to tip, usually
circinate-secund, and pointing toward the base (not underside) of the main
shoot, plicate, costa short and double, margins plane, toothed distally;
cells smooth, long-linear and flexuose in lamina. Pseudoparaphyllia
foliose. Specialized asexual reproduction
lacking. Sexual condition dioicous.
Seta smooth, red-brown,
2--3 cm. Capsule red-brown, arcuate, horizontal 1.5--2 mm, contracted
below mouth, operculum long-conic, smooth, annulus narrow; peristome double,
exostome red-brown, lanceolate, striolate basally, papillose distally;
endostome pale yellow from a broad basal membrane; cilia 2 or 3, nearly
equaling segments. Calyptra cucullate, smooth. Spores
spherical, smooth to finely papillose, 12--16 µm. Species 1 (1
in flora): North America, Europe, Ptilium is a remarkably
elegant genus that is usually easily distinguished from Hypnum in the extremely plicate circinate leaves that curve
toward the base of the main stem, not to the underside of the stem as in Hypnum. Plumose individuals of Sanionia are similar but this feature is also reliable, as is the
double costa in Ptilium, which is
single in Sanionia. 1. Ptilium crista-castrensis (Hedwig) De Not., Comment. Soc.
Crittogamol. Ital. 2: 283 [Cronaca Briol. Ital. 2: 17]. 1867 Hypnum crista-castrensis Hedw. Spec. Musc. Frond. 287. 1801 Plants usually lacking rhizoids, dark green in deeply shaded
sites, orange-golden to rusty in exposed sites. Sporophytes are occasional;
capsules mature fall. Predominantly on coniferous forest floors but also in
tundra, peatland and in deciduous forest, especially in the boreal region;
0--2000 m; Greenland, Alta., B.C.,
Man., Nfld., N.B., N.S., N.W.T., Ont., P.E.I., Que., Sask., Yukon; Alaska,
Colo., Conn., Idaho, Iowa, Mass., Md., Me., Mich., Minn., Mont., Neb., N.H.,
N.J., N.Y., N.C., Penn., S.Dak., Tenn., Vt., Va., Wash., W.Va., Wis., Wyo.;
Eurasia.
|