Cinclidium subrotundum
Bot. Not. 1868: 72. 1868.
Plants 3–8(–12) cm. Stems dark reddish brown. Leaves green, reddish brown, or black when old, erect-spreading, ± flat, not strongly reflexed when moist, broadly elliptic, ± orbicular, spatulate, occasionally ovate or obovate, 3.5–6 mm; base short-decurrent; margins plane or weakly recurved, 2- or 3-stratose; apex rounded, obtuse, or rarely retuse, apiculate or sometimes not, apiculus blunt; costa percurrent, excurrent, or rarely subpercurrent; medial laminal cells elongate, (40–)70–110 µm, in diagonal rows, weakly collenchymatous; marginal cells short-linear or linear, in 3 or 4 rows. Sexual condition synoicous. Seta yellowish, 4–6 cm. Capsule yellowish, subglobose, 1.5–2.5 mm. Spores 25–70 µm.
Phenology: Spores 25-70 µm, mature summer.
Habitat: Peat and deep organic soil to shallow wet mineral soil on rock in fens, along river banks
Elevation: low to moderate elevations
Distribution
![V28 349-distribution-map.gif](/w/images/b/bb/V28_349-distribution-map.gif)
Greenland, Alta., B.C., Man., Nfld. and Labr., N.W.T., Nunavut, Que., Yukon, Alaska, Mich., Europe.
Discussion
Cinclidium subrotundum is distinguished by its broadly elliptic, nearly orbicular or spatulate leaves usually ending in a small, blunt apiculus. When present, the subglobose capsules are also diagnostic.
Selected References
None.