Neomacounia

Ireland

Bryologist 77: 454, figs. 1 – 24. 1974.

Endemic
Etymology: For John Macoun, 1831 – 1920 Canadian botanist and explorer
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 610. Mentioned on page 602, 603, 611, 647.

Plants small to medium-sized, shelf-forming, yellow-green, glossy. Stems creeping, sparsely and irregularly branched; paraphyllia absent. Stem and branch leaves erect, imbricate, ovate to oblong-ovate, symmetric to asymmetric, concave, some finely plicate; margins serrulate at apex, teeth not recurved; apex abruptly acute to acuminate; ecostate, costa double, or rarely single, short; basal laminal cells irregularly rectangular, walls pitted. Sexual condition autoicous; perichaetial inner leaves oblong to obovate-oblong. Seta 0.04–0.05 cm. Capsule globose; peristome single; exostome teeth narrowly lanceolate, slightly striate basally, smooth distally. Spores 24–28 µm.

Discussion

Species 1.

Neomacounia was described to accommodate a species placed originally in Forsstroemia (Leptodontaceae). Ireland used characters of capsule, seta, calyptra, branchlets, costa, leaves, distal and basal laminal cells, and pseudoparaphyllia to support the placement of this genus in Neckeraceae.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa