Stems: with branches elongate, branched. Leaves: wide-spreading when moist, 1.3–1.6 mm; apex narrowly acute to short-acuminate; costa ending in base of acumen, laterally spurred, tip not 2-fid. Perichaetia: with inner leaves 2.5–2.8 mm, awn distinct, strongly denticulate, 1/2 length expanded portion of leaf. Capsule: with peristome double; exostome teeth single; endostome segments slender-triangular. Calyptra: conic. Spores: papillose. Phenology: Capsules mature Mar–Apr.
Twigs and branches of trees and shrubs, humid forests. low elevations (0 m). Fla., Mexico, West Indies, Central America.
Cryphaea filiformis is rather similar vegetatively to C. glomerata, but the branches of the former are generally longer and the interior perichaetial leaves are much longer with proportionally longer awns. Although A. J. Grout (1934) wrote that the capsules of C. filiformis are often at the apices of stems and branches, this is not correct; he was misled by a mixed collection that included Schoenobryum concavifolium in addition to C. filiformis. In S. concavifolium, the perichaetia are terminal. Cryphaea filiformis was attributed to Georgia by A. J. Sharp et al. (1994), but this was an error based on misinterpretation of the specimen label on A. J. Grout†s North American Musci Perfecti 218, a mixed collection partly from southern Florida and partly from southern Georgia.