Takakia

S. Hattori & Inoue

J. Hattori Bot. Lab. 19: 133. 1958 ,.

Etymology: For N. Takaki, 1915–2005, who first collected the genus in Japan
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 27. Treatment on page 43. Mentioned on page 3, 4, 7, 9, 11, 42, 108.
Revision as of 19:38, 24 September 2019 by FNA>Volume Importer

Plants small, bright green, in dense turfs. Stems short, 0.5–2 cm, erect, mostly unbranched or weakly sympodially branching with colorless branches arising at acute or right angles from the erect leafy stems. Leaves reduced proximally and widely spaced, distally more densely arranged and roughly 3-ranked or irregularly arranged, of 1–4 segments, erect or spreading. Sexual condition with antheridia lateral, elongate, orange-brown when mature, archegonia lateral and often orange-tinged, not halting subsequent stem growth. Seta 0.5–2.6 mm, straight and erect. Capsule elongate-elliptic, 0.6–2.3 × 0.3–0.5 mm, green becoming brown. Spores 25–36 µm.

Distribution

nw North America, Asia (Borneo, China, India, Japan, Nepal).

Discussion

Species 2 (2 in the flora).

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Leaves essentially 3-ranked, mostly of 4 segments, connate at base, not caducous, in median cross-sectional segments with 2-5 inner large cells and 10-15 smaller thick-walled epidermal cells, distal portion of leafy shoots rigid, brittle and caducous, sporophytes infrequent; plants without a distinctive odor when dry. Takakia ceratophylla
1 Leaves irregularly ranked, of (1-)2(3-4) segments, not or only occasionally connate at base, somewhat caducous, in median cross-sectional segments with 1-2 inner thin-walled cells and ca. 8 smaller thin-walled outer epidermal cells, distal portion of leafy shoots often lax, not caducous; sporophytes unknown; plants cinnamon-scented when dry Takakia lepidozioides