Entosthodon sonorae

(Cardot) Steere

Bryologist 41: 39. 1938,.

Basionym: Funaria sonorae Cardot Rev. Bryol. 36: 110. 1909
Synonyms: Entosthodon bartramii Grout
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 27. Treatment on page 185. Mentioned on page 184, 186.

Plants 2–4 mm, pale yellow green. Leaves variously contorted when dry, ovate to oblong to obovate, imbricate, somewhat concave, mostly 1.5–2 mm; margins serrulate by projecting ends of thin-walled cells; apices acute, terminating in a 1–2-celled apiculus, costa ending 7–10 cells before the apiculus; basal laminal cells rectangular (50–70 × 18–25 µm), distal cells irregularly short- to oblong-rectangular, somewhat inflated marginally. Seta pale yellow, 4–5 mm, straight, not hygroscopic. Capsule yellow, elongate-cylindrical from a neck half or more the total length, 2.5–3 mm, weakly sulcate when dry and empty; exothecial cells scarcely thickened, narrowly oblong (3–4:1) near the mouth and transversely elongate in 4–6 rows proximal to the mouth; operculum conic-rounded; peristome pale brownish yellow, lanceolate with thin trabeculae proximally and terminating in a 1–2-celled hyaline evanescent tip, striate basally and nearly smooth at the tips, endostome not seen. Calyptra cucullate, long-beaked, inflated around the capsule, large, smooth. Spores 18–25 µm, smooth.


Habitat: Mineral soils, probably in shade of rocks or in crevices
Elevation: moderate to high elevations

Discussion

Enthosthodon sonorae is restricted to the Sonoran Region of southwestern United States and northern Mexico.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.