Brachythecium asperrimum

(Mitten ex Müller Hal.) Sullivant

Icon. Musc., suppl., 100. 1874.

Endemic
Basionym: Hypnum asperrimum Mitten ex Müller Hal.
Synonyms: Brachythecium columbicorutabulum KindbergB. gemmascens Müller Hal. & KindbergB. pseudostarkei Renauld & CardotB. spuriorutabulum Müller Hal. & KindbergB. subintricatum KindbergB. villardii Renauld & Cardot
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 417. Mentioned on page 415, 418, 454.
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Plants moderately small to medium-sized, occasionally large, in loose or moderately dense mats, light green to yellowish or brownish. Stems to 5–13 cm, creeping, terete- to subcomplanate-foliate, regularly pinnate, branches to 10(–15) mm, straight to flexuose, terete- or subcomplanate-foliate. Stem leaves erect or falcate-secund, densely to loosely arranged, often more loosely arranged at shoot apices, narrowly ovate or ovate-lanceolate, broadest at 1/10–1/7 leaf length, strongly concave, slightly to moderately plicate, rarely not plicate, 1.5–2.5 × 0.5–0.9 mm; base short-rounded, ± conspicuously decurrent; margins plane or sometimes recurved (more commonly proximally), serrulate to base, rarely subentire; apex gradually or abruptly acuminate; costa to 50–75% leaf length, strong, terminal spine small; alar cells short-rectangular, enlarged, 10–25 × 8–15 µm, walls thin, region distinctly delimited, of 8–10 × 5–8 cells, pellucid; laminal cells linear, 50–120 × 5–10 µm; basal cells to 10–15 µm wide, region indistinctly delimited. Branch leaves lanceolate to linear, 3–4:1; in linear leaves alar cells extending along margins to broadest point of leaf, region to 12 cells, 3 or 4 cells wide. Sexual condition dioicous. Seta red-brown, 1.5–3.5 cm, rough. Capsule inclined to horizontal, red-brown, short-cylindric, curved, 1.5–2.5 mm; annulus separating by fragments; operculum long-conic. Spores 13–18 µm.


Habitat: Soil, rotten logs, trunks, lower branches of trees
Elevation: low to high elevations (0-2000 m)

Distribution

V28 645-distribution-map.gif

Alta., B.C., Alaska, Calif., Idaho, Mont., Oreg., Utah, Wash.

Discussion

Brachythecium asperrimum appears to be endemic to the Pacific Northwest. There is one collection issued as exsiccatae: “Canadian Musci, prepared by John Macoun 650. Brachythecium subintricatum N. Sp. Meeche’s Lake, Que., Sept. 24th 1893” (MO) that contains B. asperrimum. The locality disagrees with the protologue of B. subintricatum, which mentions the type locality as Vancouver, British Columbia. A. J. Grout (1928–1940, vol. 3) and subsequent authors reported B. asperrimum as an exclusively western species. In this case, the collection was probably mislabeled. Brachythecium asperrimum is related to B. frigidum, and R. R. Ireland et al. (1987) synonymized them. Here they are treated as separate species, following Grout, E. Lawton (1971), and D. H. Norris and J. R. Shevock (2004). Superficially, B. asperrimum looks like a large Brachytheciastrum with rather enlarged, quadrate alar cells. The leaf acumina are often falcate or flexuose, and the alar regions are triangular.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Brachythecium asperrimum"
Michael S. Ignatov +
(Mitten ex Müller Hal.) Sullivant +
Hypnum asperrimum +
Alta. +, B.C. +, Alaska +, Calif. +, Idaho +, Mont. +, Oreg. +, Utah +  and Wash. +
low to high elevations (0-2000 m) +
Soil, rotten logs, trunks, lower branches of trees +
Icon. Musc., suppl., +
Brachythecium columbicorutabulum +, B. gemmascens +, B. pseudostarkei +, B. spuriorutabulum +, B. subintricatum +  and B. villardii +
Brachythecium asperrimum +
Brachythecium +
species +