building a Consortium of Bryophytes and Lichens as keystones of cryptobiotic communities
Sphagnum tenerum
Sphagnum tenerumSull. & Lesq. ex Sull.
Family: Sphagnaceae
sphagnum
[Sphagnum capillaceum var. tenerum (Sull. & Lesq. in Sull. in Gray) Andrews, moreSphagnum capillifolium var. tenerum (Sull. & Lesq. in Sull. in Gray) Crum, Sphagnum nemoreum var. tenerum (Sull. & Lesq. in Sull. in Gray) Nyh., Sphagnum usteri Warnst.]
Plants: ± robust, weak-stemmed, and compact, capitulum hemispherical, branches in capitulum short and blunt; typically mottled pale yellow-green and purplish red, without metallic sheen when dry. Stems: pale yellow-green to pink; superficial cortical cells nearly always aporose. Stem: leaves 1.4–1.8 mm, elongate-triangular, lingulate-triangular, hemiisophyllous forms elongate triangular-ovate, 1.4–1.8 mm, apex usually conspicuously toothed, border narrow at base (less than 0.25 width); hyaline cells narrowly rhombic to S-shaped, can be efibrillose and aporose but more commonly fibrillose and porose, 0–1-septate. Branches: turgid and terete, leaves, not 5-ranked. Branch: fascicles with 2 spreading and 1–2 pendent branches. Branch: leaves ovate, 1.1–1.7 mm, slightly concave, straight, apex weakly involute and conspicuously toothed; hyaline cells on the convex surface with round to elliptic pores along the commissures, grading from moderate-sized pores near apex to large pores at leaf base, concave surface with large round pores throughout. Sexual: condition uncertain, monoicous or dioicous or possibly both. Spores: 22–25 µm, finely roughened.
Damp sand and thin humus especially around pond margins, open savannas, and pine barrens. low to moderate elevations. Ala., Del., D.C., Fla., Ga., Ky., Md., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Va.
Sporophytes are uncommon in Spagnum tenerum. The sexual condition is uncertain because of past taxonomic confusion with S. capillifolium (R. E. Andrus 1980). Sphagnum tenerum is usually described (incorrectly) as having hemiisophyllous stem leaves, and many collections of other species of sect. Acutifolia with such leaves have been called S. tenerum. When correctly characterized, S. tenerum is can be confused only with S. capillifolium, with which it has only a very small range overlap. Microscopically, besides the otherwise quite different S. angermanicum, S. tenerum is the only species of sect. Acutifolia with large round free pores in most of the branch leaf hyaline cells on their concave surfaces. See also discussion under 71. S. capillifolium. Sexual condition and spore features were taken from H. A. Crum (1984). The name Sphagnum evansii Warnstorf has also been used for this taxon.