3.
Polytrichum swartzii
C. J. Hartman, Handb. Skand. Fl. ed. 5. 361. 1849.
Polytrichum commune
var.
swartzii
(C. J. Hartman) Nyholm;
P. algidum
I. Hagen & C. E. O. Jensen;
P. inconstans
I. Hagen
Plants
often rather soft and flexuose, green to blackish when old.
Stems
2-9 cm, simple, erect, in proximal part moderately to densely brownish tomentose.
Leaves
3-8 mm, loosely imbricate, appressed to erect-spreading and flexuose when dry, patent to widely spreading and weakly recurved when moist; sheath rectangular, scarcely narrowed to the blade; blade lanceolate to linear-lanceolate, often caducous at the junction of sheath and blade, the apex subulate, weakly channeled; marginal lamina 6-9 cells wide, distantly toothed to subentire; costa excurrent as short brown entire to serrulate tip, smooth abaxially or with a few teeth near apex; lamellae in profile entire to shallowly crenulate, 5-10 cells high, the marginal cells in section usually somewhat broadened, flat-topped or shallowly grooved, single or geminate, thin-walled, smooth, the marginal cells of lateral lamellae asymmetric; median sheath cells 75-110 × 2-12 µm, linear; cells of marginal lamina 9-15 µm, quadrate, thin- to firm-walled; perichaetial leaves with long sheathing bases and short subulate blade.
Seta
2.5-5 cm, reddish brown.
Capsule
2.5-3 cm, ± cubic, sharply 4-angled, suberect when mature, becoming horizontal when old; peristome teeth 64, 160-210 µm, obtuse, the basal portion 60-75 µm.
Spores
12-15 µm.
Very wet and regularly flooded situations, sedge meadows, wet tundra and lake shores (D. G. Long 1985); Greenland; Nfld. and Labr. (Labr.), N.W.T., Nunavut, Yukon; Alaska; Europe (Scandinavia); n, e Asia; Atlantic Islands (Iceland).
Polytrichum swartzii
is a northern species with distantly toothed to subentire leaves, differing chiefly by the rounded-quadrate, flat-topped (not retuse or grooved) and scarcely-thickened marginal cells of the lamellae. The capsules are shortly cubic. In Nunavut, it is known from Baffin and Devon islands.