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BFNA Title: Lescuraea |
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XX. LESCURAEA Bruch & Schimper, Bryol. Eur. 5:
101 (fasc. 46-47. Monogr. 1). 1851 * (For Charles Léo Lesquereux, 1806--1889,
Swiss-American bryologist and paleontologist) John R. Spence Plants prostrate, in thin mats, yellow-green,
gold-green, or green. Stems
slender, fragile, tips often ascending or hooked, irregularly branched;
secondary branches appressed to ascending or erect, not flagelliform at tips;
older primary stems becoming stoloniferous; paraphyllia common, filamentous
to foliose, not much branched, cells smooth or prorulose, becoming scarce on
older stems; rhizoids in clusters arising from base of stem leaves. Leaves of stems and branches similar
but branch leaves smaller; leaves ovate to ovate-lanceolate, weakly to
strongly concave, asymmetric, appressed to julaceous when dry, not
catenulate, weakly falcate-secund, erect-spreading when wet, lustrous,
lacking hair-point; lamina with 1(--2) distinct plications on each side of
costa, apex abruptly to gradually acuminate, margins serrate distally, recurved
proximally; costa moderately strong and 2/3 length of lamina to
subpercurrent, not sinuose; mid-laminal cells linear-fusiform, 4--8:1,
thin-walled, prorulose, laminal cells in acumen similar to more proximal
cells, strongly prorate; alar cells quadrate to short-rectangular, smooth,
juxtacostal cells elongate, linear-fusiform, mostly smooth, somewhat pitted. Specialized asexual reproduction absent.
Sexual condition dioicous;
perichaetial leaves pale translucent, longer and more acuminate, squarrose when
wet, costa short. Capsule ovate to
cylindric, erect, symmetric, operculum conic; annulus lacking; peristome
double, strongly reduced, exostome teeth lanceolate or linear-lanceolate,
papillose, not bordered, endostome with low basal membrane, segments slenderly
lanceolate to filiform, not keeled, cilia absent. Calyptra cucullate. Spores
small, papillose. Species 4 (1
in the flora): Northern Hemisphere, mostly in montane to arctic-alpine
regions. The four
genera Lescuraea, Pseudoleskea, Ptychodium and Rigodiadelphus
form the core group of the family Pseudoleskeaceae Schimper, but the
relationships among them have not been worked out. In the broad sense Lescuraea
has generally included as synonyms both Pseudoleskea and Ptychodium,
most European workers recognizing, however, the latter genus. Also, Rigodiadelphus
is related to these three genera, and is probably closest to Pseudoleskea.
If Rigodiadelphis is
accepted then it makes sense to segregate Pseudoleskea as well.
Otherwise this would make Lescuraea in the broad sense
paraphyletic. I thus treat Lescuraea
in the strict sense, excluding Pseudoleskea, based on numerous
differences in leaf and capsule characters.
J. R. Rohrer (1986) provided a useful comparison of differences among
the genera. M. U. Krieger has revised Lescuraea
for North America in her M. Sc. thesis ( SELCTED
REFERENCES 1. Lescuraea saxicola (Schimper in P. Bruch, W. P. Schimper & W. Gümbel) Molendo, Moostud.
144, 147, 149. 1864 Lescuraea striata var. saxicola Schimper in P. Bruch, W. P. Schimper & W. Gümbel,
Bryol. Eur. 5: 103. pl. 459 (fasc. 46--47. Monogr. 2, plate 1). 1851; L.
iliamniana Plants green to yellow-green, older stems
golden or orange. Stems weakly
appressed to substrate; irregularly branched, secondary branches common,
curved to erect, often hooked at tip; paraphyllia usually numerous on
branches, less common on primary stems, but sometimes nearly absent. Leaves of primary stems 0.7--1.4 mm,
mostly ovate-lanceolate but irregular, sometimes lanceolate, distinctly
asymmetric, strongly plicate proximally; costa orange at least at base,
serrulate abaxially distally; median laminal cells 14--50 x 4--7 /um,
slightly shorter and wider proximally, cells typically smooth, alar region
small, cells quadrate to short-rectangular, thin walled, mostly smooth;
leaves of branches smaller, median and distal cells more strongly prorulose. Seta
0.4--1.6 mm, slender, yellow-orange, flexuose. Capsule 1--2 mm, yellow-orange to red-brown. Spores 14--22 /um, coarsely papillose. Capsules rare,
mature summer (Jul--Aug). Locally common on granitic or sandstone boulders or
outcrops and exposed mineral soils, often in seepage areas in primarily
subalpine and Arctic-alpine regions; 250--3400 m; Greenland; Alta., B.C.,
Nfld. & Labr., Que., Yukon; Alaska, Colo., Nev., Utah, Vt., Wash.; n
Europe; Asia (n Russia, China, India, Japan). Lescuraea saxicola is distinguished from most Pseudoleskea
species by the elongate, thin-walled median laminal cells, and from Psuedoleskea
baileyi in lacking a hair-point. |
