TaiBIF | Search | All Living Things


Fissidens polypodioides Hedw.
Life   Plantae   Bryophyta   Fissidentaceae   Fissidens


Click on map for details about points.

IDnature guide

Links
  • Missouri Botanical Garden

  • We parsed the following live from the Web into this page. Such content is managed by its original site and not cached on Discover Life. Please send feedback and corrections directly to the source. See original regarding copyrights and terms of use.
  • Flora of North America

go to Discover Life's Facebook group

Following modified from Flora of North America
   Top | See original

Link to Flora of North America home
 
All Floras       Advanced Search
FNA Vol. 27 Page 334, 335, 339 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 27 | Fissidentaceae | Fissidens

3. Fissidens polypodioides Hedwig, Sp. Musc. Frond. 154. 1801.

Plants to 50 × 6.5 mm. Stem unbranched and sparingly branched; axillary hyaline nodules absent; central strand present. Leaves as many as 80 pairs, somewhat undulate, oblong, obtuse to broadly acute, usually bluntly mucronate, to 4 × 1 mm; dorsal lamina rounded proximally, ending at insertion; vaginant laminae 1 /2 the leaf length, acute, ± equal, minor lamina ending on or near margin; margin entire but denticulate distally, elimbate; costa percurrent to ending 2-4 cells before apex, taxifolius-type; laminal cells 1-stratose, distinct, smooth, slightly bulging, firm-walled, irregularly hexagonal, 10-20 µm, larger juxtacostally, smaller at margin. Sexual condition dioicous; perigonia and perichaetia on short axillary branches and main stems. Sporophytes 1-2 per perichaetium. Seta to 15 mm. Capsule theca slightly inclined, radially symmetric or slightly arcuate, bilaterally symmetric, to 2.5 mm; operculum about as long as theca. Calyptra cucullate, smooth, 1.5-1.55 mm. Spores 9-11 µm.

Calcareous soil, and limestone rocks and boulders along streams and in ravines; Ala., Fla., Ga., Ind., La., Miss., N.C., S.C., Tex.; Mexico; West Indies; Central America; South America; Asia.

Fissidens polypodioides is a robust species and has its greatest distribution in the neotropics and Asia. It is perhaps the handsomest species of the genus in the flora area. However, it might be confused with F. asplenioides , from which it is distinguished by taxifolius-type costa, leaves crisped but not curled tightly inward when dry, entire leaf margin, acute and more or less equal vaginant laminae, larger laminal cells that are not lenticularly thickened, and absent differentiated medial marginal cells in the vaginant laminae. The central strand is especially well developed. H. A. Crum and L. E. Anderson (1965, 1981) published illustrations of F. polypodioides and F. asplenioides that aid greatly in distinguishing the two.

Updated: 2024-04-24 10:29:54 gmt
TaiBIF | Search | All Living Things | Top
© Designed by The Polistes Corporation