Plagiochila euryphyllon Carl subsp. echinata (R.M. Schuster) Inoue
Plagiochila sciophila Nees ex Lindenb. [as listed in Heinrichs et al. 2004]
Stotler and Crandall-Stotler (2017) accepted the name Plagiochila echinata R.M. Schuster
GNRT2
Endemic to southeastern U.S.A. Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee. Restricted to the Appalachian Plateaus and Blue Ridge physiographic provinces with a single record from the Piedmont of Alabama.
Stream ravines of cove hardwood forests; moist boulder slopes in northern hardwood forests. Moderate elevations (550 – 4500 ft). Occurring on sheltered, vertical rock walls, on ceilings of cave-like boulder crevices, in shaded rock crevices often wet from seepage and the proximity of falling water, e.g. spray cliffs of the Blue Ridge Escarpment (see Zartman and Pittillo 1998).
Occurring with a rich mix of ecological associates presumably due to optimum conditions of humidity and moisture conducive to shade loving bryophytes. Commonly found with the filmy fern Trichomanes petersii. Associated liverworts: Calypogeia muelleriana, Jubula, Lejeunea laetivirens, Metzgeria leptoneura, M. myriopoda, Plagiochila appalachiana, P. porelloides, P. sullivantii, P. virginica, Porella japonica subsp. appalachiana, Radula obconica, R. sullivantii, R. tenax. Associated mosses: Arrhenopterum heterostichum, Bartramia pomiformis, Bryoandersonia, Ctenidium molluscum, Hookeria acutifolia, Isopterygium elegans, Plagiomnium carolinianum, P. ciliare, Thamnobryum alleghaniense.
Forming loose mats, sometimes extensive, 20 cm or more in diameter, or as few shoots spread thinly over substrate. Shoots to 3.5 mm wide, green to brownish, shiny when dry. Leaves spreading, only slightly altered when dry, broad to the base from a wide apex. Leaf margin with teeth spinose to cilia-like.
Dioicous?. Only male plants known. Lacking any specialized means of asexual reproduction, i.e. caducous leaves and propagula lacking.
Plagiochila is known to be a difficult genus. P. echinata is most likely to be confused with P. sullivantii with which it may co-occur. Both species have spinose teeth along the leaf margin and both when dry are shiny with leaves little altered. P. sullivantii has leaves more distinctly narrowed to the base and produces caducous leaves resulting in naked stem sectors. When optimally developed, P. echinata is easily recognized by "ovate-rectangular" leaves bearing elongate teeth with the leaf apex at times bilobed "(i.e., with 2 of the apical 'teeth' commonly prominent and long drawn out)" (Schuster 1980, p. 445). Leaves of P. sullivantii are "essentially obovate to rectangular-obovate" (Schuster 1980, p. 415). A few other regional species of Plagiochila are presented in the images below.
Schuster (1959a, b, 1960), available through JSTOR, present essentially the same treatment of the Plagiochilaceae as published in Schuster (1980).
Heinrichs, J., Lindner, M., and Groth, H. 2004. Sectional classification of the North American Plagiochila (Hepaticae, Plagiochilaceae). The Bryologist, 107(4), 489-496.
Schuster, R. M. 1959a. A monograph of the Nearctic Plagiochilaceae. Part I. Introduction and sectio I. Asplenioides. The American Midland Naturalist, 62(1), 1-166.
Schuster, R. M. 1959b. A monograph of the nearctic Plagiochilaceae Part II. Sectio Zonatae through Sectio Parallelae. The American Midland Naturalist, 62(2), 257-395.
Schuster, R. M. 1960. A monograph of the nearctic Plagiochilaceae. Part III. Sectio Contiguae to conclusion. The American Midland Naturalist, 63(1), 1-130.
Schuster, R.M. 1980. The Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of North America East of the Hundredth Meridian. Volume IV. Columbia University Press, New York.
Stotler, R. E., and Crandall-Stotler, B. 2017. A synopsis of the liverwort flora of North America north of Mexico. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 102(4), 574-709.
Zartman, C. E., and Pittillo, J. D. 1998. Spray cliff communities of the Chattooga Basin. Castanea, 217-240.