Difference between revisions of "Pseudoditrichum mirabile"

Steere & Z. Iwatsuki

Canad. J. Bot. 52: 701, figs. 1 – 46. 1974.

EndemicSelected by author to be illustrated
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 28. Treatment on page 189.
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|special status=Endemic;Selected by author to be illustrated
 
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|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/8f726806613d60c220dc4493de13607dd3150896/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V28/V28_303.xml
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|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/f6b125a955440c0872999024f038d74684f65921/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V28/V28_303.xml
 
|genus=Pseudoditrichum
 
|genus=Pseudoditrichum
 
|species=Pseudoditrichum mirabile
 
|species=Pseudoditrichum mirabile

Revision as of 19:45, 24 September 2019

Plants very small. Stems 0.1–0.3 cm. Leaves secund; margins serrulate to irregularly serrate at shoulders. Specialized asexual reproduction common, by ± spheric, reddish brown rhizoidal tubers, and filiform to bulbiform axillary gemmae. Seta 0.6 cm. Calyptra fugacious, smooth or slightly papillose distally. Spores shed singly, 15–21 µm, papillose.


Phenology: Capsules mature summer (Jul).
Habitat: Moist calcareous silt, under Populus
Elevation: moderate elevations (200 m)

Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Pseudoditrichum mirabile was collected in 1948 but not described until 1974. The gametophytes look like those of a very small Ditrichum, but the peristome is definitely diplolepidous (therefore this taxon is not related to Ditrichum). Pseudoditrichum mirabile has not been recollected since its discovery. Great Bear Lake is an unlikely place to find the only population of an endemic species, genus, and family, but the plants have a unique combination of gametophyte and sporophyte features that do not fit into any other family.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.