Plants: in lax to dense tufts, glaucous or dark green. Stems: 0.5–1 cm. Leaves: erect-appressed when dry, erect and slightly spreading when moist, narrowly lanceolate, 1.5–2.5 mm; base sheathing, shoulders well developed, firm, not eroded; margins plane to weakly revolute proximally, plane distally, serrulate distally, teeth single; apex subulate, usually intact; costa percurrent, prominent in distal limb, distal abaxial surface rough; basal laminal cell walls thin; distal cells 12–25 × 4–6 µm, prorulae high. Sexual: condition autoicous or synoicous. Seta: 1–2 cm, straight. Capsule: erect, globose to ovoid, symmetric, 1–1.5 mm; operculum conic; peristome absent. Spores: 24–35 µm. Phenology: Capsules mature Aug–Nov.
Bare soil in montane tundra. high elevations (3500-4000 m). Colo., Europe, Asia (China, India, Japan).
Bartramia subulata, limited in the flora area to the high mountains of Colorado, is a diminutive species with erect, symmetric capsules that might be mistaken for B. stricta. The latter species, however, has a well-developed exostome, the leaf base is not sheathing, and shoulders are absent or, at best, weakly developed.