Difference between revisions of "Oxyrrhynchium"

(Schimper) Warnstorf

Krypt.-Fl. Brandenburg 2: 781. 1905.

Etymology: Greek oxys, acute, and rhynchos, nose, alluding to beaked operculum
Basionym: Eurhynchium subg. Oxyrrhynchium Schimper in P. Bruch and W. P. Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 5: 224. 1854
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 449. Mentioned on page 405, 407, 408, 435, 447, 653.
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Latest revision as of 21:37, 5 November 2020

Plants medium-sized, in loose tufts, light green to whitish or brownish. Stems creeping to arching, loosely, occasionally more densely terete-foliate, julaceous or not, irregularly or sometimes regularly branched, branches terete-, subcomplanate-, or sometimes distinctly complanate-foliate, especially when leaves remote; central strand present; pseudoparaphyllia acute; axillary hairs of 2 or 3 cells. Stem leaves erectopatent to patent, loosely arranged to occasionally loosely imbricate, broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, slightly to moderately strongly concave, not plicate; base narrowly short-decurrent; margins serrate to serrulate; apex gradually tapered to acute, long- or short-acuminate; costa to 50–70% leaf length, broad throughout, terminal spine present, sometimes with additional teeth abaxially; alar cells enlarged; laminal cells elongate, walls moderately thick; basal juxtacostal cells shorter, slightly broader. Branch leaves slightly to strongly differentiated, if strongly differentiated then more elliptic, broadest at 1/3–1/2 leaf length, twisted mid leaf; base often asymmetric; apex more shortly acuminate to acute; costa more strongly toothed distally, terminal spine more stout; laminal cells not or occasionally prorate. Sexual condition dioicous; perichaetial leaf acumen long, reflexed. Seta red-brown, rough. Capsule inclined to horizontal, red-brown, elongate, curved; annulus separating in fragments; operculum short-conic, narrowly long-rostrate; peristome xerocastique, perfect. Calyptra naked. Spores 10–13 µm.

Distribution

Nearly worldwide, absent in cold boreal regions.

Discussion

Species 10–15 (1 in the flora).

The segregation of Oxyrrhynchium from Eurhynchium was initially accepted by many authors, including V. F. Brotherus (1924–1925). However, the species were later placed back into Eurhynchium (for example, H. Robinson 1962; H. A. Crum and L. E. Anderson 1981). The phylogenetic analysis by M. S. Ignatov and S. Huttunen (2002) demonstrated that Eurhynchium in the broad sense is polyphyletic, and Oxyrrhynchium belongs to a subfamily different from Eurhynchium in the strict sense. Oxyrrhynchium is distinct in having a rough seta (smooth in Eurhynchium), and a tendency for subcomplanate foliage, but this is not observed in Eurhynchium. Aquatic species closely related to Oxyrrhynchium are treated as Donrichardsia (Huttunen et al. 2006).

Selected References

None.