Difference between revisions of "Tetraplodon"

Bruch & Schimper

Bryol. Europ. 3: 211, plates 288 – 290. 1844.

Etymology: Greek tetraplo - , fourfold, and odon, tooth, alluding to arrangement of exostome teeth
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 21. Mentioned on page 15, 650, 663.
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Latest revision as of 21:33, 5 November 2020

Plants in dense tufts, often brown proximally, bright green to yellow-green distally. Stems 0.5–3(–8) cm; often matted with rhizoids proximally. Stem leaves slender- to oblong-lanceolate, or obovate and acuminate; margins toothed or entire; apex acute, acuminate, or subulate; costa usually ending in subula; proximal laminal cells elongate, rectangular; distal cells rectangular, hexagonal, or oblong-hexagonal. Sexual condition autoicous or rarely dioicous. Seta 0.2–5 cm, not twisted. Capsule cleistocarpous or not, yellowish or reddish to dark brown or black, cylindric to ovoid or spindle-shaped; hypophysis same color or darker than urn, short to elongate, narrower to barely wider than urn; annulus usually absent; operculum hemispheric to bluntly conic; peristome single; exostome teeth 16, at first ± coherent in 4’s, later in 2’s, usually reflexed when dry, inflexed when moist, of 2 layers of cells. Calyptra conic-mitrate or cucullate, small, not constricted beyond base. Spores 8–12 µm, smooth or slightly papillose.

Distribution

Nearly worldwide, alpine, subalpine, and temperate to subarctic regions.

Discussion

Species 10 (5 in the flora).

Species of Tetraplodon are entomophilous and coprophilous although apparently restricted to the dung of carnivores, bones, and owl pellets. The hypophysis is well developed, elongate, and usually wrinkled when dry; the exostome teeth are connate in 4’s when young but in 2’s as they age; and the seta is stout.

Key

1 Leaves long-lanceolate; margins with large teeth, occasionally entire. Tetraplodon angustatus
1 Leaves ovate or oblong-ovate; margins entire or nearly so > 2
2 Capsules cleistocarpous, clear pale yellow to stramineous; hypophysis conspicuously narrower than urn. Tetraplodon paradoxus
2 Capsules not cleistocarpous, usually reddish to black, rarely yellow to stramineous; hypophysis usually as wide or wider than urn > 3
3 Setae shorter than 1 cm; leaf apices broadly acute; costae ending before subula. Tetraplodon urceolatus
3 Setae 1-5 cm; leaf apices subulate or acuminate; costae ending in subula > 4
4 Leaf apices abruptly subulate; capsules red, dark red to black with age. Tetraplodon mnioides
4 Leaf apices acuminate; capsules pale yellow to stramineous. Tetraplodon pallidus
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