Funariaceae

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Funariaceae
Funaria hygrometrica1.jpg
Funaria hygrometrica
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Bryophyta
Class: Bryopsida
Subclass: Funariidae
Order: Funariales
Family: Funariaceae
Schwägr.
Genera

The Funariaceae are a family of mosses in the order Funariales. [1] About 303 species are included in the family, with 200 species in Funaria and another 80 classified in Physcomitrium . [2]

The genus Goniomitrium has been recently moved from the Pottiaceae to the Funariaceae. [3]

Related Research Articles

<i>Takakia</i> Genus of mosses

Takakia is a genus of two species of mosses known from western North America and central and eastern Asia. The genus is placed as a separate family, order and class among the mosses. It has had a history of uncertain placement, but the discovery of sporophytes clearly of the moss-type firmly supports placement with the mosses.

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

Andreaeaceae is a family of mosses which includes two genera, Andreaea, containing about 100 species, and the genus Acroschisma. The Andreaeaceae prefer rocky habitats ranging from tropical to arctic climates, on which they form tufted colonies, typically with reddish to blackish shoots. The capsules lack the peristome mechanism and dehisce longitudinally to release the spores, resulting in a paper-lantern appearance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bryopsida</span> Class of mosses

The Bryopsida constitute the largest class of mosses, containing 95% of all moss species. It consists of approximately 11,500 species, common throughout the whole world.

<i>Buxbaumia</i> Genus of mosses

Buxbaumia is a genus of twelve species of moss (Bryophyta). It was first named in 1742 by Albrecht von Haller and later brought into modern botanical nomenclature in 1801 by Johann Hedwig to commemorate Johann Christian Buxbaum, a German physician and botanist who discovered the moss in 1712 at the mouth of the Volga River. The moss is microscopic for most of its existence, and plants are noticeable only after they begin to produce their reproductive structures. The asymmetrical spore capsule has a distinctive shape and structure, some features of which appear to be transitional from those in primitive mosses to most modern mosses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bryidae</span> Subclass of mosses

Bryidae is an important subclass of Bryopsida. It is common throughout the whole world. Members have a double peristome with alternating tooth segments.

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

Orthotrichaceae is the only family of mosses in the order Orthotrichales. Many species in the family are epiphytic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Funariales</span> Order of mosses

Funariales is an order containing 356 species,26 genera and 7 families.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grimmiales</span> Order of mosses

Grimmiales is an order of mosses in the subclass Dicranidae. It comprises four families: Grimmiaceae, Ptychomitriaceae, Seligeriaceae, and Saelaniaceae.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sphagnopsida</span> Subclass of mosses

Sphagnopsida is a class of mosses that includes a single subclass Sphagnidae, with two orders. It is estimated it originated about 465 million years ago, along with Takakia. The order Sphagnales contains four living genera: Ambuchanania, Eosphagnum, and Flatbergium, which counts four species in total, and Sphagnum which contains the rest of the species. The extinct Protosphagnales contains a single fossil species.

<i>Diphyscium</i> Genus of mosses

Diphyscium is a genus of mosses in the family Diphysciaceae. Members of this genus are small, perennial plants. The capsule does not elongate much, and remains buried among surrounding leaves.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Funariidae</span> Subclass of mosses

The Funariidae are a widespread group of mosses in class Bryopsida. The majority of species belong to the genera Funaria and Physcomitrium.

Gradsteinia is a genus of moss in family Amblystegiaceae.

Merrilliobryum is a genus of moss in family Fabroniaceae. The genus is found in New Guinea and the Philippines.

Andreaeobryum, the Mossy Cowl Moss, is a genus of moss with a single species Andreaeobryum macrosporum, endemic to Alaska and western Canada. The genus is placed as a separate family, order and class among the mosses.

<i>Oedipodium</i> Genus of mosses

Oedipodium is the only genus of moss in the family Oedipodiaceae. It contains the single species Oedipodium griffithianum, the gouty-moss or Griffith's oedipodium moss. This species is distributed in cooler climates of Eurasia, as well as from Alaska, Washington state, British Columbia, Yukon, Greenland, Newfoundland, Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bryales</span> Order of mosses

Bryales is an order of mosses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Encalyptales</span> Order of mosses

Encalyptales is an order of mosses in subclass Funariidae. It contains a single family.

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

Encalyptaceae is a family of mosses in order Encalyptales. It includes two genera; the genus Bryobartramia, formerly included in the family, is now placed in its own family.

<i>Timmia</i> Genus of mosses

Timmia is a genus of moss. It is the only genus in the family Timmiaceae and order Timmiales. The genus is named in honor of the 18th-century German botanist Joachim Christian Timm.

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

Bryaceae is a family of mosses.

References

  1. Buck, William R. & Bernard Goffinet. 2000. "Morphology and classification of mosses", pages 71-123 in A. Jonathan Shaw & Bernard Goffinet (Eds.), Bryophyte Biology. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). ISBN   0-521-66097-1.
  2. McIntosh, Terry T. (2002). "Funariaceae". Flora of North America. Vol. 27. New York: Oxford Univ Pr. pp. 180–199. ISBN   978-0-19-531823-4.
  3. Goffinet, Bernard; Norman J. Wickett; Olaf Werner; Rosa Maria Ros; A. Jonathan Shaw; Cymon J. Cox (2007). "Distribution and Phylogenetic Significance of the 71-kb Inversion in the Plastid Genome in Funariidae (Bryophyta)". Annals of Botany. 99 (4): 747–753. doi:10.1093/aob/mcm010. PMC   2802940 . PMID   17337480.