Ptychostomum nitidulum

(Lindberg) J. R. Spence

Phytologia 89: 113. 2007.

Basionym: Bryum nitidulum Lindberg Öfvers. Kongl. Vetensk.-Akad. Förh. 23: 545. 1867
Synonyms: B. teres Lindberg
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 162. Mentioned on page 157.
Revision as of 22:43, 27 May 2020 by imported>Volume Importer

Plants in dense or open turfs, yellow-green, yellow-brown, red-green, or brown. Stems 0.5–2(–3) cm, evenly foliate to comose, innovations elongate and evenly foliate; weakly radiculose. Leaves green, ± imbricate to weakly contorted or shrunken when dry, ovate, strongly concave, 1–2 mm, somewhat enlarged toward stem apex; base not decurrent; margins revolute to mid leaf, limbidium strong, in (2–)3–4(–5) rows; apex acute to obtuse; costa not reaching apex to percurrent, rarely short-excurrent, awn denticulate; proximal laminal cells 3–4:1, same width as more distal cells; medial and distal cells hexagonal, 12–18 µm wide, 2–3:1, walls somewhat to distinctly incrassate. Specialized asexual reproduction absent. Sexual condition synoicous or sometimes polyoicous, with female-only gametangia. Seta (1–)2–3 cm. Capsule yellow-brown, short-pyriform, asymmetric, curved, 2–3 mm, mouth yellow; operculum short-convex, apiculate; peristome reduced; exostome teeth yellow-brown basally, hyaline distally, lamellae straight mid tooth, pores absent along mid line; endostome not adherent to exostome, basal membrane low, 1/3 exostome height, segments with ovate perforations, cilia usually present, appendiculate, sometimes reduced. Spores 15–22(–25) µm, finely papillose, brown-yellow.


Phenology: Capsules mature Jul–Aug.
Habitat: Wet soil
Elevation: low to moderate elevations (0-1000 m)

Distribution

V28 258-distribution-map.gif

Greenland, N.W.T., Nunavut, Yukon, Alaska, Eurasia.

Discussion

Ptychostomum nitidulum is a small plant close to P. intermedium, but differs in ecology, leaf structure, and sexual condition. The arctic P. teres is very close to P. nitidulum, differing in minor characters of the capsule only. D. T. Holyoak (2004) synonymized P. nitidulum with P. intermedium, but they are here kept distinct, based primarily on the leaf differences, until more detailed studies are completed.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.