Plagiomnium rhynchophorum var. carolinianum (L.E. Anderson) T.J. Kop.
Plagiomnium carolinianum (L.E. Anderson) T.J. Kop.
Mnium carolinianum L. E. Anderson
Other synonyms listed in Yi et al. (2018)
not assigned; G3 for Plagiomnium carolinianum
North America. U.S.A. (Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee), Mexico. Central America, South America, Asia, Africa, (Yi et al. 2018). Plagiomnium rhynchophorum subsp. maximoviczii occurs in Asia.
Regionally, hemlock-hardwood stream ravines, usually in deep shade; on wet rock, humus, or soil along streams, cliff ledges, spillways and waterfalls. Zartman and Pittillo (1998) recorded the species as a member of the spray cliff community. Often found along small streams and seeps that feed into larger streams. A single specimen in Kentucky, Risk and Richardson 13946 (MDKY), is from limestone downstream from the mouth of a cave. Low elevations, 700-2700 ft.
Associated bryophytes include (most of the following from Anderson 1954) , MOSSES: Anomodon attenuatus, Arrhenopterum heterostichum, Ambylstegium tenax, Bryoandersonia illecebra, Bryocrumia vivicolor, Campylium chrysophyllum, Cirriphyllum piliferum, Ctenidium molluscum, Entodon sullivantii, Fissidens taxifolius, F. dubius, Hookeria acutifolia, Isopterygiopsis muelleriana, Leucobryum glaucum, Mnium hornum, Plagiomnium ciliare, Rhizomnium punctatum, Rhynchostegium aquaticum, Thamnobryum alleghaniense, and Thuidium delicatulum; LIVERWORTS: Chiloscyphus pallescens, Dumortiera hirsuta, Jubula pennsylvanica, Metzgeria leptoneura, Pallavicinia lyellii, Plagiochila porelloides, Porella pinnata, Radula sullivantii, Riccardia multifida, and Scapania nemorea.
Plants robust, dark green, fertile stems erect, forming tufts 2-3 cm high; sterile stems horizontal, 4-8 (20) cm long. Leaves spreading and undulate when moist, crisped and contracted when dry, 5-10 mm long, oblong-lingulate, apices retuse or emarginate, short-mucronate. Leaf margin with mostly one-celled, blunt teeth. Leaf base long-decurrent.
Synoicous. 1-4 sporophytes per fertile shoot tip. Outer cells of capsule wall bulging when moist, imparting a pebbly texture, when dry collapsing and imparting a roughened texture. Description derived from Crum and Anderson (1981) and McIntosh and Newmaster (2014).
In the Southern Appalachians, Plagiomnium rhynchophorum is most similar to P. rostratum (=Mnium longirostrum). Some forms of P. rostratum are so similar to Plagiomnium rhynchophorum that a specimen from Blowing Springs, Swain Co., NC, identified by Lewis Anderson as the synonym Plagiomnium carolinianum, was annotated to P. rostratum by Yan-Jun Yi (Anderson 10151, DUKE). The difficulty comes when some larger leaves of P. rostratum are nearly strap-shaped with weak undulations and slightly emarginate apices; however, many leaves in such specimens will be broadly elliptic without undulations. Similarities between the two species include a long-beaked operculum and leaf margins toothed to near the base with short blunt teeth. Differences include the outer cells of the capsule wall in P. rostratum lacking the distinctive collapsed shape when dry and swollen shape when hydrated, P. rostratum lacking the well-marked decurrencies of leaf bases, and P. rostratum lacking the decidedly strap-shaped leaves with strong undulations. Sporophytes in both species are often not present, thus identifications must often rely on vegetative characters.
Anderson, L. E. 1954. A new species of Mnium from the southern Appalachians. The Bryologist, 57(3), 177-188.
Anderson, L.E. 1996 (revised 1977 by Amoroso). Bryophyte Status Survey: Plagiomnium carolinianum (Anderson) T.Kop. North Carolina Heritage Program.
Crum, H. A., and L. E. Anderson. 1981. Mosses of Eastern North America (Vol. 1). Columbia University Press
Koponen, T.J. 2014. Bryophyte flora of Hunan Province, China. 18. Mniaceae subfam. Mnioideae (Musci). Acta Bryolichenologica Asiatica 5: 39–72
McIntosh, T. T., and Newmaster, S. G. 2014. Plagiomnium. In: Flora of North America, North of Mexico 28: 229–235.
Yi, Y. J., Sun, Z. W., He, S., and Sulayman, M. 2018. A study of molecular sequences, sexuality, and morphological variation in Plagiomnium carolinianum, P. maximoviczii, and P. rhynchophorum (Bryophyta, Mniaceae). Phytotaxa, 375(1), 81-91.
Zartman, C. E., and Pittillo, J. D. 1998. Spray cliff communities of the Chattooga Basin. Castanea, 217-240.
Some text and images on this page were originally prepared for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources in 2010, contract number 605-090427 with Paul G. Davison and used here with permission.