Calymperastrum

Calymperastrum latifolium is the sole species in the monotypic moss genus Calymperastrum. It is a poorly known moss, having been collected only three times. All three collections were from the trunks of Macrozamia, in the Southwest Botanic Province of Western Australia. It is presumed endemic to the region, making it the only moss genus known endemic to that state.

Calymperastrum

Priority Two — Poorly Known Taxa (DEC)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Bryophyta
Class: Bryopsida
Subclass: Dicranidae
Order: Pottiales
Family: Pottiaceae
Genus: Calymperastrum
I.G.Stone
Species:
C. latifolium
Binomial name
Calymperastrum latifolium

Description

This moss grows in a low turf, yellowish green from above but yellowish brown below. It has unbranching stems about six millimetres in length, with a reddish-brown mat of hairs on their lower half. These support numerous narrow spathulate leaves from 2.0 to 3.1 millimetres long. Nothing is known of its sexual structures and sporophytes.[2]

Taxonomy

This taxon was first collected from near Perth in the 1840s, and published as Calymperes latifolium in 1846 by Georg Ernst Ludwig Hampe, in Volume II of Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's Plantae Preissianae.[3] In the 1980s, a careful examination showed it to be only superficially similar to Calymperes (Calymperaceae). It was held to belong to a different family, the Pottiaceae, but did not fit into any of that family's published genera. In 1985, therefore, Ilma Grace Stone published Calymperastrum and transferred C. latifolium into it.[4]

Since publication the genus has been treated only once, in R. H. Zander's 1993 Genera of the Pottiaceae: Mosses of Harsh Environments. Zander found its morphology to be transitional between the Pottiaceae and the Calymperaceae, having many properties characteristic of the latter, and many properties characteristic of both. The only character of Calymperastrum that does not occur in the Calastraceae is the presence of a leaf hydroid strand.[2]

In 1999 the genus was accepted as valid in Crosby's A Checklist of Mosses.[5]

Distribution and habitat

This moss has only been collected three times, once from near Perth, and twice from the vicinity of Windy Harbour. It is therefore presumed endemic to the Southwest Botanic Province of Western Australia. This would make it the only endemic moss genus in Western Australia, although the region is thought to contain a further three endemic species of non-endemic genera.

Ecology

All three collections of this moss were found growing as an epiphyte on the trunk of a Macrozamia. It is therefore postulated, but by no means certain, that the species has a preference for this genus.[4][6]

Because there are so few known populations of this moss, the Department of Environment and Conservation has rated it "Priority Two - Poorly Known Taxa" on the Declared Rare and Priority Flora List.[1]

gollark: Well, in that case, you could collect it into a vec<chars>.
gollark: ```rustlet c = s.chars()c.len()```
gollark: Troubling. I'll look into this.
gollark: Although you shouldn't do that because the operation is fairly bees.
gollark: `x.chars().len()` doesn't work?

See also

References

  1. "Calymperastrum latifolium (Hampe) I.G.Stone". FloraBase. Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.
  2. Zander, R. H. (1993). "Genera of the Pottiaceae: Mosses of Harsh Environments (Online Edition)". Retrieved 2008-04-09.
  3. Hampe, G. E. L. (1846). "Calymperes latifolium Hampe". In Lehmann, J. G. C. (ed.). Plantae Preissianae. II. p. 116.
  4. "Case Studies: Taxonomic changes and bryogeography". Australian Bryophytes. Australian National Botanic Gardens. Retrieved 2008-04-09.
  5. Crosby, M.; et al. (1999). "A Checklist of Mosses". Retrieved 2008-04-09.
  6. Stoneburner, Ann; Wyatt, Robert; Catcheside, David; Stone, Ilma (1993). "Census of the Mosses of Western Australia". The Bryologist. 96 (1): 86–101. doi:10.2307/3243324. JSTOR 3243324.

Further reading

  • Stone, I. G. (1985). "Calymperastrum, a new genus of Pottiaceae". Journal of Bryology. 14: 315–318.
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