Lycopodiella

Lycopodiella is a genus in the clubmoss family Lycopodiaceae. The genus members are commonly called bog clubmosses, describing their wetland habitat. The genus has a cosmopolitan,[1] with centers of diversity in the tropical New World and New Guinea. In the past, the genus was often incorporated within the related genus Lycopodium, but was segregated in 1964.[2] In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), Lycopodiella is placed in the subfamily Lycopodielloideae, along with three other genera. In this circumscription, the genus has about 15 species.[3] Other sources use a wider circumscription, in which the genus is equivalent to the subfamily of PPG I, in which case about 40 species and hybrids are accepted.

Lycopodiella
Lycopodiella inundata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Lycophytes
Class: Lycopodiopsida
Order: Lycopodiales
Family: Lycopodiaceae
Subfamily: Lycopodielloideae
Genus: Lycopodiella
Holub
Species

See text

Description

Lycopodiella are non-flowering plants. They have leafy rhizomes that grow along the ground and vertical, leafy shoots, also known as peduncles.[4] Fertile peduncles have strobili at the top of the shoot.[4] Individuals can have short, creeping rhizomes with simple strobili, branching rhizomes with many strobili, or anywhere in between.[1] The North American specimens are typically shorter, have thinner shoots, and have fewer vertical shoots in the North than specimen in the South.[5]

Life cycle

Lycopodiella life cycles include an independent sporophyte stage and a long-lived gametophyte stage.[6] Individuals reproduce by single-celled spores that disperse and germinate into small plants when in suitable conditions.[2] This part of the plant is called the gametophyte; it produces the eggs and sperm.[2] After fertilization, the embryos grow into sporophytes, which are larger spore-bearing plants.[2] The sporophyte is the vegetative part of the plant seen in nature. Juvenile individuals typically re-sprout in the spring or after a fire.[4] Individuals have a base chromosome number of 78.[7]

Taxonomy

In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), Lycopodiella is placed in the subfamily Lycopodielloideae, along with three other genera (Lateristachys, Palhinhaea and Pseudolycopodiella).[3] Other sources do not recognize these genera, submerging them into Lycopodiella.[8][9]

Extant species

Lycopodiella inundata

As of December 2019, the Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World recognized the following species:[10]

  • Lycopodiella alopecuroides (L.) Cranfill – foxtail clubmoss; North and South America
  • Lycopodiella andicola B.Øllg.
  • Lycopodiella appressa (Chapm.) Cranfill – southern clubmoss, appressed bog clubmoss; eastern North America, Cuba
  • Lycopodiella duseniana (B.Øllg. & P.G.Windisch) B.Øllg.
  • Lycopodiella geometra B.Øllg. & P.G.Windisch – Brazil (Minas Gerais)
  • Lycopodiella hydrophila (Alderw.) P.J.Edwards – New Guinea
  • Lycopodiella inundata (L.) Holub – marsh clubmoss or bog clubmoss; circumpolar cool temperate
  • Lycopodiella limosa Chinnock – northern Queensland
  • Lycopodiella margueritae J.G.Bruce – northern prostrate clubmoss; United States (Michigan)
  • Lycopodiella prostrata (R.M.Harper) Cranfill – feather stem clubmoss; southeastern United States
  • Lycopodiella raiateensis (J.W.Moore) comb. ined.Society Islands
  • Lycopodiella subappressa J.G.Bruce, W.H.Wagner & Beitel – northern appressed clubmoss; United States (Michigan)
  • Lycopodiella tupiana (B.Øllg. & P.G.Windisch) B.Øllg.

Some hybrids have also been described:[10]

  • Lycopodiella × brucei Cranfill
  • Lycopodiella × copelandii (Eiger) Cranfill
  • Lycopodiella × gilmanii A.Haines
  • Lycopodiella × robusta (R.J.Eaton) A.Haines

Using the broader circumscription of the genus, Plants of the World Online recognized the following additional Lycopodiella species as of December 2019.[9] Using the narrow circumscription of the genus Lycopodiella, the Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World divided them among three other genera:[10]

  • Lycopodiella affinis (Bory) Pic.Serm. = Pseudolycopodiella affinis
  • Lycopodiella benjaminiana P.G.Windisch = Pseudolycopodiella benjaminiana
  • Lycopodiella bradei (Herter) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea bradei
  • Lycopodiella camporum B.Øllg. & P.G.Windisch = Palhinhaea camporum
  • Lycopodiella carnosa (Silveira) B.Øllg. = Pseudolycopodiella carnosa
  • Lycopodiella caroliniana (L.) Pic.Serm. = Pseudolycopodiella caroliniana
  • Lycopodiella cernua (L.) Pic.Serm. = Palhinhaea cernua
  • Lycopodiella contexta (Mart.) Holub = Pseudolycopodiella contexta
  • Lycopodiella curvata (Sw.) Greuter & R.Rankin = Palhinhaea curvata
  • Lycopodiella descendens B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea descendens
  • Lycopodiella diffusa (R.Br.) B.Øllg. = Lateristachys diffusa
  • Lycopodiella glaucescens (C.Presl) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea glaucescens
  • Lycopodiella iuliformis (Underw. & F.E.Lloyd) B.Øllg. = Pseudolycopodiella iuliformis
  • Lycopodiella krameriana B.Øllg. = Pseudolycopodiella krameriana
  • Lycopodiella lateralis (R.Br.) B.Øllg. = Lateristachys lateralis
  • Lycopodiella lehmannii (Hieron.) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea lehmannii
  • Lycopodiella maniculata B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea maniculata
  • Lycopodiella pendulina (Hook.) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea pendulina
  • Lycopodiella riofrioi (Sodiro) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea riofrioi
  • Lycopodiella sarcocaulon (A.Braun & Welw. ex Kuhn) Pic.Serm. = Pseudolycopodiella sarcocaulon
  • Lycopodiella serpentina (Kunze) B.Øllg. = Pseudolycopodiella serpentina
  • Lycopodiella steyermarkii B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea steyermarkii
  • Lycopodiella tomentosa (Alderw.) P.J.Edwards = Palhinhaea tomentosa
  • Lycopodiella torta (Underw. & F.E.Lloyd) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea torta
  • Lycopodiella trianae (Hieron.) B.Øllg. = Palhinhaea trianae
  • Lycopodiella veigae (Vasc.) O.Eriksson, A.Hansen & Sunding = Palhinhaea veigae

Distribution and habitat

Lycopodiella is found worldwide, but typically in temperate and tropical areas, a majority of which are found in North and South America.[11] Individuals are typically found in terrestrial lowlands or montane forests on poor soils.[12] Much of the soils are sandy and saturated and have little to no organic layer.[2]

North America

The known Lycopodiella in North America consists of six species and four hybrids.[13] All but one species of Lycopodiella, Lycopodiella inundata, are limited to the East coast, Gulf of Mexico, and/or Great Lakes region.[13] L. inundata is found from New England to Alaska and down into California.[13]

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gollark: Well, it processes food, and also includes a non-negligible fraction of your mental processes I suppose.
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References

  1. Wikström, Niklas; Kendrick, Paul (2000). "Relationships of Lycopodium and Lycopodiella Based on Combined Plastid rbcL Gene and trnL Intron Sequence Data". Relationships of Lycopodium and Lycopodiella Based on Combined Plastid rbcL Gene and trnL Intron Sequence Data. 25 (3): 496.
  2. Gilman, Arthur (2004). Lycopodiella alopecuroides (L.) Cranfill Foxtail bog clubmoss. pp. i, 3.
  3. PPG I (2016). "A community-derived classification for extant lycophytes and ferns". Journal of Systematics and Evolution. 54 (6): 563–603. doi:10.1111/jse.12229.
  4. Weakley, Alan (2010). Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States. pp. 18–19.
  5. Haines, Arthur (2003). "Lycopodiella ×gilmanii (Lycopodiaceae), a New Hybrid Bog Clubmoss from Northeastern North America". American Fern Journal. 93 (4): 196–197.
  6. Winther, Jennifer; Friedman, William (2007). "Blackwell Publishing Ltd Arbuscular mycorrhizal associations in Lycopodiaceae". New Phytologist. 177 (3): 790.
  7. Arana, Marcelo; Gonzalez, Andrés; Bonifacino, Mauricio; Brussa, Carlos (2017). "A Revision of Lycopodiaceae from Uruguay". International Journal of Advanced Research in Botany. 3 (4): 28.
  8. Christenhusz, Maarten J.M. & Chase, Mark W. (2014). "Trends and concepts in fern classification". Annals of Botany. 113 (9): 571–594. doi:10.1093/aob/mct299. PMC 3936591. PMID 24532607.
  9. "Lycopodiella Holub". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
  10. Hassler, Michael & Schmitt, Bernd (November 2019). "Lycopodiella". Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World. 8.11. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
  11. Øllgaard, Benjamin (1992). "Neotropical Lycopodiaceae - An Overview". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 79 (3): 711–712.
  12. Sahidan, NorShahidah; Choo, Chee Yan; Latiff, Abdul Rais; Jaman, Razali (2012). "Variations of huperzine A content in Lycopodiaceae species from tropics". Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines. 10 (2).
  13. "BONAP's North American Plant Atlas". 2014.
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