Difference between revisions of "Forsstroemia"

Lindberg

Öfvers. Kongl. Vetensk.-Akad. Förh. 19: 605. 1863.

Etymology: For Johan Erik Forsström, 1775 – 1824, Swedish pastor and plant collector
Basionym: Lasia P. Beauvois Mag. Encycl. 5: 315. 1804,
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 624. Mentioned on page 584, 590, 593, 611, 623, 625, 646, 654.
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|distribution=North America;Mexico;South America;s Asia (India;Nepal);Africa;se Australia;temperate regions.
 
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|discussion=<p>Species 11 (2 in the flora).</p><!--
 
|discussion=<p>Species 11 (2 in the flora).</p><!--
--><p>Plants of Forsstroemia are epiphytic or occasionally found on rock. Sporophyte generations (cohorts) overlap in their development, with individual sporophytes requiring approximately 18 months to mature. As a result, embryonic sporophytes from the present year are found along the same stem with maturing sporophytes initiated in the previous year. Spores are dispersed in winter. This pattern of sporophyte maturation is shared with species in the related genera Alsia, Dendroalsia, Leptodon, and Neckera. The reddish, smooth seta is twisted when dry and straight when moist; the peristome is inserted below the capsule mouth; the exostome teeth are occasionally perforate distally or rarely cribrose, with median lines straight or moderately zigzag, lamellae and trabeculae low or absent, plates usually symmetric, occasionally irregularly shaped, and additional external depositions rare; and the rudimentary endostome segments are often fragmentary and adherent to the exostome.</p>
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--><p>Plants of <i>Forsstroemia</i> are epiphytic or occasionally found on rock. Sporophyte generations (cohorts) overlap in their development, with individual sporophytes requiring approximately 18 months to mature. As a result, embryonic sporophytes from the present year are found along the same stem with maturing sporophytes initiated in the previous year. Spores are dispersed in winter. This pattern of sporophyte maturation is shared with species in the related genera <i>Alsia</i>, <i>Dendroalsia</i>, <i>Leptodon</i>, and <i>Neckera</i>. The reddish, smooth seta is twisted when dry and straight when moist; the peristome is inserted below the capsule mouth; the exostome teeth are occasionally perforate distally or rarely cribrose, with median lines straight or moderately zigzag, lamellae and trabeculae low or absent, plates usually symmetric, occasionally irregularly shaped, and additional external depositions rare; and the rudimentary endostome segments are often fragmentary and adherent to the exostome.</p>
 
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|source xml=https://bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation/src/2e0870ddd59836b60bcf96646a41e87ea5a5943a/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V28/V28_980.xml
 
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Latest revision as of 21:39, 5 November 2020

Secondary stems irregularly pinnate; paraphyllia absent; pseudoparaphyllia subfoliose to occasionally filamentous. Stem leaves loosely appressed to imbricate when dry, erect-spreading to squarrose when moist, lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate or broadly so, ovate, ovate-acuminate, oval, or deltoid; margins recurved to mid leaf or beyond, entire or serrulate distally; apex acute to short-acuminate; costa single or double, ending before apex; alar region extending up margins to 1/3 leaf length; medial laminal cells elliptic to linear. Branch leaves similar, smaller. Sexual condition autoicous; perichaetial leaf apex straight. Seta 0.4–3.9 mm. Capsule erect, immersed to exserted, cylindric; stomata absent; operculum conic to erect or obliquely rostrate; exostome teeth free to base or rarely connate proximally, linear-lanceolate, smooth, granulose, or minutely papillose; endostome rudimentary to absent. Calyptra hairy. Spores 15–35 µm, green.

Distribution

North America, Mexico, South America, s Asia (India, Nepal), Africa, se Australia, temperate regions.

Discussion

Species 11 (2 in the flora).

Plants of Forsstroemia are epiphytic or occasionally found on rock. Sporophyte generations (cohorts) overlap in their development, with individual sporophytes requiring approximately 18 months to mature. As a result, embryonic sporophytes from the present year are found along the same stem with maturing sporophytes initiated in the previous year. Spores are dispersed in winter. This pattern of sporophyte maturation is shared with species in the related genera Alsia, Dendroalsia, Leptodon, and Neckera. The reddish, smooth seta is twisted when dry and straight when moist; the peristome is inserted below the capsule mouth; the exostome teeth are occasionally perforate distally or rarely cribrose, with median lines straight or moderately zigzag, lamellae and trabeculae low or absent, plates usually symmetric, occasionally irregularly shaped, and additional external depositions rare; and the rudimentary endostome segments are often fragmentary and adherent to the exostome.

Key

1 Laminal cells fusiform to linear, 4-8:1; costae single or double, weak. Forsstroemia trichomitria
1 Laminal cells isodiametric to short-oblong, 1-3:1; costae single, extending beyond mid leaf. Forsstroemia producta
... more about "Forsstroemia"
Lloyd R. Stark +
Lindberg +
North America +, Mexico +, South America +, s Asia (India +, Nepal) +, Africa +, se Australia +  and temperate regions. +
For Johan Erik Forsström, 1775 – 1824, Swedish pastor and plant collector +
Öfvers. Kongl. Vetensk.-Akad. Förh. +
stark1987a +
Forsstroemia +
Leptodontaceae +