Plants: large, in dense or moderately dense tufts, green to golden brownish. Stems: creeping or more commonly ascending to erect when in dense tufts, julaceous, irregularly pinnate, branches terete-foliate; central strand present; pseudoparaphyllia acute; axillary hairs of 4–6 cells. Stem: leaves erect-spreading, loosely imbricate in older parts of shoots, closely imbricate at shoot apices (or dense throughout shoots in compact tufts), broadly ovate-triangular to broadly ovate, strongly concave, slightly plicate; base narrowly short-decurrent, somewhat auriculate; margins serrate to serrulate; apex gradually tapered, short-acuminate or apiculate; costa to 50–90% leaf length, narrow, terminal spine absent; alar cells subquadrate to short-rectangular, broader than basal cells, walls thick; laminal cells linear, slightly flexuose, walls moderately thick; basal cells broader than more distal cells. Branch: leaves similar. Sexual: condition dioicous; perichaetial leaves reflexed, apex acuminate. Seta: red to red-brown, smooth. Capsule: inclined to horizontal, brown, oblong, slightly curved; annulus separating by fragments; operculum broadly long-rostrate; peristome xerocastique, perfect. Calyptra: naked. Spores: 13–17 µm. North America.
Species 1. Bryoandersonia was segregated by Robinson from the heterogeneous Cirriphyllum, where it was placed by A. J. Grout (1898). Phylogenetic analysis by M. S. Ignatov and S. Huttunen (2002) confirmed the independent status of this genus, which is probably one of the most isolated and ancient in the family.