Plants: in dense mats, bright green. Stems: to 10 cm, subpinnate, branches complanate-foliate. Leaves: erect to spreading, oblong-lanceolate to oblong-ovate, widest near insertion, 1.4–2 mm; margins plane, entire proximally, serrulate distally; apex acute; ecostate or costa double, very short; alar region gradually differentiated, 1-stratose, ± reaching costa. Sexual: condition autoicous. Seta: yellow, 1–3 cm. Capsule: long-cylindric, 2–4 mm; annulus not differentiated; operculum bluntly short-rostrate; exostome teeth reddish, external and internal surfaces irregularly striate throughout, perforate; endostome segments striate to coarsely papillose proximally, papillose at extreme apex. Spores: 12–16 µm.
Base of trees, rock, soil, road banks, logs, mesic, often calcareous habitats. low to moderate elevations. Ala., Ark., Fla., Ga., La., Miss., N.C., S.C., Tenn., Tex., Va., Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America.
Entodon macropodus is one of the most distinctive and common species of the genus in the southeastern United States. The perforate exostome teeth are strikingly beautiful with their irregular striations on both the external and internal surfaces (and often on the endostome segments as well). The long, yellow setae with erect capsules are often an easy field identification aid.