35.
Fissidens zollingeri
Montagne, Ann. Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 3. 4: 114. 1845.
Fissidens kegelianus
Müller Hal.
Plants
to 5.5 × 3.0 mm.
Stem
unbranched and branched; axillary hyaline nodules absent; central strand weak or absent.
Leaves
as many as 12 pairs, lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, rarely linear-lanceolate, acute or infrequently obtuse, to 2.5 × 0.5 mm; dorsal lamina narrowed proximally, ending at insertion, not decurrent; vaginant laminae ±
1
/2 leaf length, equal; margin entire but serrulate distally, limbate on all laminae, limbidium confluent at apex or ending slightly before, limbidial cells 1- or 2-stratose; costa percurrent to short-excurrent, bryoides-type; laminal cells 1-stratose, distinct, smooth, slightly bulging, firm-walled, irregularly hexagonal, 6.5-18 µm, greatly enlarged, ± oblong, ± pellucid in juxtacostal patches in proximal portions of vaginant laminae.
Sexual condition
rhizautoicous and synoicous.
Sporophytes
1-2 per perichaetium.
Capsule
theca erect, radially symmetric to slightly arcuate, bilaterally symmetric, 0.5-0.8 mm; peristome scariosus
-
type; operculum to 0.8 mm.
Calyptra
cucullate, smooth, 0.6 mm.
Spores
10-13 µm.
Damp calcareous soil and limestone rocks in ravines and woods; Ala., Fla., Ga., La., Miss.; Mexico; West Indies; Central America; South America; Asia; Africa.
Fissidens zollingeri
is best distinguished by its usually palmately arranged leaves, limbidium present on all laminae of the leaf, and juxtacostal patches of enlarged, oblong, pellucid cells in the proximal parts of the vaginant laminae. The distal laminal cells are distinct, smooth, and slightly bulging. It is closely related to two other tropical species,
F. angustifolius
Sullivant and
F. yucatanensis
Steere, both of which have limbate leaves and groups of enlarged, pellucid cells in the proximal parts of the vaginant laminae. The distal laminal cells of those species, however, are mammillose. Axillary, stalked, multicellular, clavate gemmae have been observed in tropical specimens of
F. zollingeri
.