Consortium of Bryophyte Herbaria
- building a Consortium of Bryophytes and Lichens as keystones of cryptobiotic communities -
Login New Account
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
    • Exsiccatae
    • Dynamic Species List
    • Dynamic Identification Key
    • Taxonomic Explorer
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Image Search
  • Species Checklists
    • North America
    • United States>
      • Arizona
      • California
      • Illinois
      • Iowa
      • Maine
      • Missouri
      • Montana
      • New Mexico
      • New York
      • North Carolina
      • Ohio
      • Pennsylvania
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
    • Beyond North America>
      • Chile
      • Falkland Islands
      • Fiji
      • Guatemala
      • Indonesia
      • Malaysia
    • Species Groups>
      • Frullania
      • Plagiochila
      • Sphagnum
    • US National Parks
  • Crowdsourcing
  • Associated Projects
    • Consortium of Lichen Herbaria
    • GLOBAL Bryophytes and Lichens Network
    • MyCoPortal
  • More Information
    • Data Usage Policy
    • Partners
  • Sitemap
  • Help
    • Symbiota Help
    • Lichen Consortium Resources
Archidium hallii Austin  
Family: Archidiaceae
Hall's archidium moss
[Archidium ephemeroides Müll. Hal., moreArchidium lorentzii Müll. Hal.]
Archidium hallii image
  • Flora of North America
  • Resources
John R. Spence from Flora of North America (vol. 27)
Plants 3-10 mm, perennial, in dense short turfs, pale-green to yellow-green. Stems branched by several innovations from axils of stem leaves or outer perichaetial leaves, often becoming prostrate with age. Stem leaves erect-spreading, lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, 0.7-1.5 mm, becoming reduced proximally; costa percurrent to slightly excurrent; laminal margins smooth, weakly recurved; median and distal laminal cells rhomboidal to hexagonal, 3-4:1, 35-70 × 12-18 µm, proximal cells rectangular, 2-4:1, 40-70 × 18-24 µm, short-rectangular to quadrate in alar region in 2-6 rows extending 7-15 cells along proximal laminal margin; leaves of innovations similar to distal stem leaves except being smaller, gradually reduced proximally. Perichaetial leaves larger, 1.5-3 mm, elongate-triangular, lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, gradually acuminate; costa percurrent to short-excurrent; laminal margins smooth, weakly recurved distally; median and distal laminal cells uniformly rhomboid to hexagonal, 3-7:1, 35-130 × 15-28 µm, proximal cells rectangular, 4-6:1, 70-140 × 15-28 µm, sometimes hyaline in alar region but cells not strongly differentiated. Specialized asexual reproduction absent. Sexual condition autoicous, antheridia terminating axillary leaf buds. Capsule terminal, 450-700 µm. Spores typically 20(8-36) per capsule, triangular to rounded-polyhedral, 140-250 µm, smooth to granulose, yellow.

Capsules mature early spring (Mar) or rarely late fall (Nov). Uncommon to rare on moist open sandy or loamy soil, along roadsides and in grassy often disturbed areas; 0-200 m; Fla., Ga., Tex.; Mexico; South America.

Archidium hallii can be distinguished from similar-looking forms of A. tenerrimum by autoicous sexuality and leafy bracts enclosing the antheridia.



Archidium hallii
Open Interactive Map
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Archidium hallii image
Click to Display
36 Total Images

 

This project made possible by National Science Foundation Awards: #1115116, #2001500, #2001394
Powered by Symbiota.