Family: Mielichhoferiaceae

Synonyms

none

NatureServe Conservation Status

G1

Distribution

Endemic to the Southern Appalachians. Georgia, North Carolina.

Habitat

Northern hardwood forests dominated by Quercus rubra, scattered Picea rubens present at the North Carolina site. North facing slopes, on exposed mineral soil along trails; high elevations (4200 – 4900 ft) (Shaw 2014; Shevock and Shaw 2005).

Bryophytes found within a few centimeters of P. rabunbaldensis at Rabun Bald include: Liverworts: Calypogeia, Cephalozia bicuspidata, Diplophyllum apiculatum, Solenostoma gracillimum, Scapania nemorea. Mosses: Atrichum, Diphyscium foliosum, Ditrichum sp., Isopterygium elegans, Pohlia annotina, Pohlia nutans, Rhizomnium punctatum, and Thuidium.

Brief Description and Tips for Identification

Forming loose tufts on soil, sometimes intermingled with other mosses. Shoots mostly unbranched, to 1 cm long, upright, often at a low angle to the substrate. Leaves lanceolate, costate, ca. 1 mm long, erect to spreading. Leaves are dull and slightly contorted when dry. Bulbiform gemmae green becoming orange-red when mature, occurring singly in a few leaf axils of some shoots. Gemmae with triangular leaf primordia near the gemma apex and also lower on the body of the gemma.

Dioicous? Only archegoniate female plants known.

Pohlia rabunbaldensis is similar to Pohlia drummondii, a North American-European species not found in the Southern Appalachians. Both species have similar bulbiform gemmae. P. rabunbaldensis plants are dull and leaves are slightly contorted when dry, whereas in P. drummondii plants are glossy and leaves are unaltered when dry (Shaw 2014). Dull leaves that become slightly contorted when dry are characters shared with Pohlia annotina with which P. rabunbaldensis may occur. The gemmae of regional P. annotina are elongated with leaf primordia restricted to their apex (Crum and Anderson 1981).

Positive identification of Pohlia rabunbaldensis requires gemmae. No other regional moss possesses bulbiform gemmae. Gemmae may not be present until summer and fall. Shoots without gemmae may be indistinguishable from Pohlia annotina (when without gemmae) and small, sterile forms of Pohlia nutans.

Salient Features

  • Dull plants
  • Leaves slightly contorted when dry
  • Bulbiform gemmae in leaf axils

References

Crum, H. A., and L. E. Anderson 1981. Mosses of Eastern North America (Vol. 1). Columbia University Press.

Shaw, A.J. 2014. Mielichhoferiaceae. In: Flora of North America, North of Mexico 28: 190-214.

Shevock, J. R., and Shaw, A. J. 2005. Pohlia robertsonii and P. rabunbaldensis (Bryopsida, Mniaceae), two new species from the western and eastern United States. The Bryologist, 108(2), 177-182.

Acknowledgment

Some text and images on this page were originally prepared for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources in 2010, contract number 605-090427 with Paul G. Davison and used here with permission.


Habitat

moss

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Pink pencil points to the tuft found on trailside. Small black arrows in the enlarge inset indicate green bulbiform gemmae.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Occurring on soil at the base of the exposed rock; hand lens with blue lanyard placed on rock.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

A small tuft on near vertical dirt bank under a large boulder facing a clearing in the canopy (not in photo but significant in that some exposure to light seems a requirement).

Habitat

moss

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

This rock formation occurs in the trail where the forest canopy is not completely closed above.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

We were surprised to see bulbiferous P. rabunbaldensis in these trail ruts, 24 October 2015. Gary Kauffman stands by.

Habit

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Red arrows indicate bulbiform gemmae of P. rabunbaldensis. The sporophytes belong to P. nutans.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Blue arrows indicate bulbiform gemmae.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Hydrated plant with two gemmae, one on each side of the shoot near the shoot apex.

Habit

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

A dry shoot with somewhat contorted leaves and two, distant, green gemmae protruding on left side of shoot.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Dry plant with somewhat contorted leaves.

Morphology

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Plants with mature gemmae turning orange. Triangular leaf primordia at arrows. Upper insets of detached gemmae.

liverwort

Pohlia rabunbaldensis

Leaf tip in left panel, decurrent leaf base indicated in right panel.

Similar Taxon

liverwort

Pohlia annotina

Clusters of gemmae often occur in one leaf axil. A single gemma's elongated body indicated by yellow arrow, the apically restricted leaf primordia by black arrows.