Plants: dark green, olive green, or more commonly dark red, red-brown, or brown. Stems: 1–3(–4) cm, not julaceous, innovations many; rhizoids few on proximal stem. Leaves: somewhat crowded, somewhat contorted when dry, erect to erect-spreading when moist, narrowly to broadly ovate, concave, 1–2(–3) mm; base long-decurrent, red; margins plane, multistratose, limbidium present, (1–)2–4-stratose; apex broadly acute to obtuse; costa not reaching apex to rarely percurrent; proximal laminal cells rectangular, (60–)80–100 × 18–28 µm, 3–5:1, sometimes bulging, walls thin; distal cells irregularly rhomboidal, 35–60 × 12–24 µm, 1–3:1, walls thin. : Specialized asexual reproduction absent. Sexual: condition dioicous. [Seta slender, 1–1.5 cm, flexuose to sometimes geniculate. Capsule: suberect, 2–3 mm; hypophysis weakly differentiated, relatively short; operculum not apiculate; peristome well developed; exostome pale yellow proximally, teeth lanceolate; endostome hyaline, not adherent to exostome, segments present, cilia absent. Spores: 11–14 µm, smooth or papillose, pale brown]. Phenology: Capsules mature Jul–Aug.
Damp to seepy rock, soil over rock. moderate to high elevations (700-2200 m). Ariz., N.Mex., Okla., Mexico, Central America.
Plagiobryoides incrassatolimbata is characterized by its large size and unusual multistratose leaf border of short, wide cells. This species is similar in many respects to P. renauldii, from which it is distinguished by its limbidium, generally red-brown colored leaves (sometimes green), and lack of rhizoidal tubers. The sporophyte description is from H. Ochi and N. Salazar Allen (1990).