Ptilidium ciliare

Last updated

Ptilidium ciliare
Ptilidium ciliare (a, 132028-465914) 6847.JPG
A clump of Ptilidium ciliare, the individual ciliated leaves not easily visible in this picture.
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Marchantiophyta
Class: Jungermanniopsida
Order: Ptilidiales
Family: Ptilidiaceae
Genus: Ptilidium
Species:
P. ciliare
Binomial name
Ptilidium ciliare
(L.) Hampe
Synonyms [1]
  • Blepharozia ciliaris(L.) Dumort
  • Jungermannia ciliarisL.

Ptilidium ciliare is a liverwort with the common names ciliated fringewort [2] and northern naugehyde liverwort. It is widespread in Canada, Alaska, the northeastern United States, Greenland, Iceland, and northern Europe occasionally as far south as northern Italy. [3] [4] [5]

Contents

Description

An individual leaf of P. ciliare seen under a microscope, with the fringing cilia clearly visible. Ptilidium ciliare (c, 145608-482741) 6808.JPG
An individual leaf of P. ciliare seen under a microscope, with the fringing cilia clearly visible.

Ptilidium ciliare grows in loose, reddish-brown to yellow-green tufts, with individual shoots up to 3 mm wide. Its stems are pinnate or bipinnate, with short stubby branching clusters of dense overlapping leaves covering its stem. The leaves are up to 2.8 mm wide and 2.3 mm long, and the leaves are finely serrated or ciliated, the margins extended as fringe-like rows of thin teeth. The teeth make it difficult to see that the leaves are bilobed. Sexual reproductive structures are very rarely observed on this species. [5] [6]

Habitat

Ptilidium ciliare is commonly found in lowland to upland habitats such as acidic grassland, rocky slopes, cliff ledges, screes, wall tops, dwarf shrub heaths, bogs, sand dunes and heathy woodlands. It is usually seen growing amongst a mixture of other bryophyte species. Well-drained and acidic substrates are the preferred growth medium of this species. It rarely grows on fallen logs and branches. [5] [6]

Similar species

Stunted forms of P. ciliare could be mistaken for the species P. pulcherrimum , but P. pulcherrimum is smaller, and more compact, almost always growing closely to bark. Mastigophora woodsii is a more robust plant, with longer, attenuated branches on which the leaf size gradually tapers towards the tips. [6]

Related Research Articles

<i>Riccia</i> Genus of liverworts

Riccia is a genus of liverworts in the order Marchantiales.

<i>Meesia triquetra</i> Species of moss

Meesia triquetra, the three-ranked hump-moss, is a moss that occurs all around the northern hemisphere in higher latitudes.

Ptilidium californicum, the Pacific fuzzwort, is a rare liverwort of the western United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tetraphidaceae</span> Family of mosses

Tetraphidaceae is a family of mosses. It includes only the two genera Tetraphis and Tetrodontium, each with two species. The defining feature of the family is the 4-toothed peristome.

<i>Hypnum cupressiforme</i> Species of moss

Hypnum cupressiforme, the cypress-leaved plaitmoss or hypnum moss, is a common and widespread species of moss belonging to the genus Hypnum. It is found in all continents except Antarctica and occurs in a wide variety of habitats and climatic zones. It typically grows on tree trunks, logs, walls, rocks and other surfaces. It prefers acidic environments and is fairly tolerant of pollution. It was formerly used as a filling for pillows and mattresses; the association with sleep is the origin of the genus name Hypnum.

<i>Rhytidiadelphus squarrosus</i> Species of moss in the family Hylocomiaceae

Rhytidiadelphus squarrosus is a species of moss known as springy turf-moss in the United Kingdom, and square goose neck moss in the United States. It is widespread in Eurasia and North America, and has been introduced to the Southern Hemisphere. It has broad ecological tolerances, and is usually found in man-made habitats such as lawns and golf courses. It is most closely related to R. subpinnatus, with which it is often confused.

<i>Ptilidium</i> Genus of liverworts

Ptilidium is a genus of liverwort, and is the only genus in family Ptilidiaceae. It includes only three species: Ptilidium californicum, Ptilidium ciliare, and Ptilidium pulcherrimum. The genus is distributed throughout the arctic and subarctic, with disjunct populations in New Zealand and Tierra del Fuego. Molecular analysis suggests that the genus has few close relatives and diverged from other leafy liverworts early in their evolution.

<i>Sphaerocarpos texanus</i> Species of liverwort

Sphaerocarpos texanus, the Texas balloonwort, is a species of liverwort in the Sphaerocarpaceae family, found in the Americas, northern Africa and Europe.

<i>Bartramia pomiformis</i> Species of moss

Bartramia pomiformis, the common apple-moss, is a species of moss in the Bartramiaceae family. It is typically green or glaucous in hue, although sometimes it can appear yellowish. The stems extend from a half cm to 8 cm, with narrowly lanceolate to linear-lanceolate leaves 4 - 9 mm long. The leaves have a nerve and are toothed. They are curled when dry but stick out when moist.

<i>Polytrichum juniperinum</i> Species of moss

Polytrichum juniperinum, commonly known as juniper haircap or juniper polytrichum moss, is an evergreen and perennial species of moss that is widely distributed, growing on every continent including Antarctica.

<i>Calliergon cordifolium</i> Species of moss

Calliergon cordifolium is a species of moss in the Calliergonaceae family, commonly known as the calliergon moss or heart-leaved spearmoss. The species is abundant in the right habitat, and grows in marshes and wet woodland, especially woodland of alder (Alnus) or willow (Salix), as well as around streams, ditches and pools. The species grows in tufts among other moss species. Calliergon cordifolium requires a wet environment to grow, and often grows completely submerged in water. It typically prefers lowland, but has been recorded as high as 910 metres (1,000 yd) above sea level in Inverness, Scotland. The species has a circumpolar Boreo-temperate distribution. It is found throughout Europe. It has been recorded in north and central Asia, as well as Turkey and Japan, throughout North America and in New Zealand.

<i>Conocephalum conicum</i> Species of liverwort

Conocephalum conicum, also known as the great scented liverwort or snakeskin liverwort, is a liverwort species in the genus Conocephalum. C. conicum is part of the Conocephalum conicum complex, which includes several cryptic species. The name C. conicum refers to the cone-shaped archegoniaphore, which bear sporangia.

Petalophyllum ralfsii, the petalwort, is a liverwort of the order Fossombroniales. It is a small green bryophyte that occurs in the Mediterranean region as far east as Turkey, and along the Atlantic coast of Europe as far as northwest Scotland. It grows primarily on moist sand dunes.

<i>Bazzania trilobata</i> Species of liverwort

Bazzania trilobata, the greater whipwort or threelobed bazzania, is a species of liverwort in the Lepidoziaceae family. It grows in the northern hemisphere temperate zone.

<i>Mylia taylorii</i> Species of liverwort

Mylia taylorii, or Taylor's flapwort, is a species of leafy liverwort.

<i>Racomitrium lanuginosum</i> Species of moss

Racomitrium lanuginosum is a widespread species of moss found in montane and arctic tundra, the genus Racomitrium is found across the Northern and Southern hemispheres., however Racomitrium lanuginosum is only found in the Northern hemisphere. It grows as large mats on exposed rock and in boulder scree, particularly on acidic rocks. Its leaves have a characteristically decurrent and toothed hair-point, which gives rise to its regional common names woolly fringemoss, hoary rock-moss and woolly moss.

<i>Pogonatum urnigerum</i> Species of moss

Pogonatum urnigerum is a species of moss in the family Polytrichaceae, commonly called urn haircap. The name comes from "urna" meaning "urn" and "gerere" meaning "to bear" which is believed to be a reference made towards the plant's wide-mouthed capsule. It can be found on gravelly banks or similar habitats and can be identified by the blue tinge to the overall green colour. The stem of this moss is wine red and it has rhizoids that keep the moss anchored to substrates. It is an acrocarpous moss that grows vertically with an archegonium borne at the top of each fertilized female gametophyte shoot which develops an erect sporophyte.

<i>Metzgeria furcata</i> Species of liverwort

Metzgeria furcata, the forked veilwort, is a frequent liverwort growing on the bark of a wide range of tree and shrub species and occasionally on rocks. It is a slim, translucent thallose liverwort forming yellow-green mats of branches about 1mm wide.

<i>Marchesinia mackaii</i> Species of liverwort

Marchesinia mackaii, or MacKay's pouncewort, is a species of leafy liverwort.

<i>Polytrichum piliferum</i> Species of moss

Polytrichum piliferum, the bristly haircap, is an evergreen perennial species of moss in the family Polytrichaceae. The bristly haircap moss is small-sized to medium-sized and forms loose tufts with wine-reddish stems. It is an acrocarpous moss that appears bluish-green to grey. This moss grows in clumps on erect shoots and becomes a red-brown colour as it grows older. The most distinguishing feature of P. piliferum is the long, white awn at the tips of the leaves, which also give this moss its grey colour. It is the only species in its genus where the awn is completely hyaline.

References

  1. "Ptilidium ciliare (L.) Hampe — The Plant List". www.theplantlist.org.
  2. Edwards, Sean R. (2012). English Names for British Bryophytes. British Bryological Society Special Volume. Vol. 5 (4 ed.). Wootton, Northamphton: British Bryological Society. ISBN   978-0-9561310-2-7. ISSN   0268-8034.
  3. "Ptilidium ciliare (L.) Hampe maps - Encyclopedia of Life".
  4. Hampe, Georg Ernst Ludwig. Prodromus Florae Hercyniae 76. 1836.
  5. 1 2 3 "Ciliated Fringewort - Ptilidium ciliare". naturespot.org.uk. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 "Ptilidium ciliare Ciliated Fringewort" (PDF). bbsfieldguide.org.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.