Plants: light yellow-green to yellow-brown, shiny or glossy. Stems: to 2 cm, usually shorter, densely foliose, simple or 2-fid at base; central cylinder small; moderately radiculose from stem and leaf bases, radicles hyaline to reddish, smooth, with oblique tangential walls. Leaves: patent, erect-spreading when dry, spreading when moist, keeled or shallowly carinate; margins plane or partly broadly recurved; apex slender-acute; costa ending subapically or sometimes short-excurrent; alar cells equilateral to short-rectangular, red-brown, in 1 or 2 rows, somewhat smaller and thicker than laminal cells just distal; proximal laminal cells laxly oblong-hexagonal; medial cells linear to linear-rhomboidal; distal cells broader; apical cells short- to long-rectangular. Seta: yellowish, slender, erect-flexuose. Capsule: symmetric, smooth when moist; exothecial cells pale brown to yellow-brown; stomata phaneropore, in neck. Nearly worldwide, tropical and temperate regions.
Species 14 (2 in the flora). Orthodontium was monographed by W. Meijer (1951) and treated in Mexico by H. A. Crum (1994d) and in Central America by B. H. Allen (2002). Leaves of Orthodontium have 1–2(–4) rows of brown cells at the insertion, which appear associated with rhizoid initials. A. E. Newton and N. E. Bell (2006) analyzed Orthodontium lineare and indicated that stems of Orthodontium may produce branch-axes from epidermal cells, including perichaetial, perigonial, and vegetative branch-axes. These branch-axes are attached to the stem by rhizoids and may produce innovations by small clusters of cells, one of which produces a short branch. The leaves are similar to those of some genera in Bryaceae, but that family generally has broader leaves and more rectangular to quadrate laminal cells. Orthodontium may resemble species of Dicranaceae in the reddened, lax cells at the laminal insertion, but it differs in the smooth, evenly long-rectangular to linear cells, subserrulate apex, and narrow costa (D. H. Norris and J. R. Shevock 2004). The two species in the flora may represent a relict from the Tertiary flora (A. L. Andrews 1932). Populations of Orthodontium in pristine areas of coniferous forest in the flora area may be particularly vulnerable to habitat disturbance from logging.