Brachydontium
Flora 10(2,Beil.): 37. 1827 ,.
Taxon | Illustrator ⠉ | |
---|---|---|
Brachydontium olympicum Brachydontium trichodes | Patricia M. Eckel Patricia M. Eckel |
Plants of acidic rock, often volcanic, brownish. Alar cells not differentiated. Perigonial leaves broader and shorter than vegetative leaves. Perichaetial leaves similar to vegetative leaves. Sexual condition autoicous or rarely dioicous. Capsule striate; annulus compound; peristome teeth papillose or absent. Calyptra mitrate to sometimes subcucullate.
Distribution
North America, Central America (Honduras), South America (Brazil), South America (Colombia), Europe, Asia, Australia
Discussion
Species 9 (2 in the flora).
Brachydontium is a genus of tiny, brownish plants of acidic rocks with striate capsules and peristomes ranging from well developed to completely absent. The species in the flora are olive green to brownish, stems ca. 0.6–2 mm; leaves 0.5–2.5 mm, erect, in ± two apparent rows, lanceolate-subulate, obtuse, leaf margins nearly entire, costa filling the subula; and the columella is not developed. They grow sympatrically on Mt..
Selected References
None.
Lower Taxa
Key
1 | Peristome absent; distal laminal cells mostly isodiametric. | Brachydontium olympicum |
1 | Peristome of 16 short, truncate teeth; distal laminal cells predominantly short-rhombic. | Brachydontium trichodes |