Family: Bryoxiphiaceae

Synonyms

none recent

NatureServe Conservation Status

G5?

Distribution

North America. U.S.A. Across the U.S. from Alaska to Alabama, known from 15 States (Hill 2002). Extirpated in Colorado (Hill 2002). East of the Mississippi River from Tennessee southward: Alabama, North Carolina, Tennessee; according to Löve and Löve (1953) also in South Carolina. The Flora of North America treatment (Pursell 2007) does not include Alabama in the state distribution list, yet the species has long been known to occur there (Harvill 1949; Crum and Anderson 1981). East Asia. Mauritius. Iceland. Patiño et al. 2016.

Two subspecies of Bryoxiphium norvegicum are recognized: subsp. norvegicum, and subsp. japonicum, the latter distributed in East Asia (Patiño et al. 2016).

Habitat

In the the southeastern U.S. occuring in stream ravines on moist, shaded rock, commonly sandstone, where the rock surface is protected and sheltered from direct rainfall. This includes vertical surfaces and sheltered ledges and especially backwalls and sloping ceilings of rockhouses and smaller outcroppings. Rocks supporting Bryoxiphium overhang streams or may be a hundred or more feet from running water. The microhabitat is in constant high humidity but never dripping wet from direct rainfall or from the direct spray of waterfalls. In the southeastern U.S. known populations occur below 4000 ft in elevation.

Brief Description and Tips for Identification

Among mosses, Bryoxiphium is quite distinctive and easily identified. Shoots are unbranched, 0.4-3 cm long and perennial; stiffly projecting from the substrate, few and scattered or more commonly found in dense, large aggregations approaching 1 square meter (usually less) of contiguous cover. Shoots do indeed resemble a sword, hence the well established common name sword moss. Shoots are typically shiny, narrow and parallel sided, flattened throughout yet thinning to the margins reminiscent of a sword's cutting edge. Leaves are folded in half along their long axis (conduplicate) such that the costa forms the keel. Projecting from the back of the costa is a low, several cells high lamella of photosynthetic cells that dissappears before the reaching the leaf base.

Dioicous. In the southeastern U.S. only females are known. Given the apparent lack of regional spore production and lack of specialized asexual reproduction, regional populations have likely persisted in place for the last century and are likely far, far older. The scattered populations of Bryoxiphium throughout most of North America are thought to be the remnants of a more contiguous distribution across the Northern Hemisphere dating back to 10 million years ago (Patiño et al. 2016).

Salient Features

  • Shoots elongated and flattened, rather rigid and parallel sided, thinning towards the lateral margins
  • Leaves strictly 2-ranked
  • Leaves tightly imbricate, each leaf folded in half lenthwise, partly surrounding the next leaf above
  • Leaves costate, the costa forms the keel of the folded leaf
  • A lamella several cells high projects from the back of the costa

References

Bryoxiphium norvegicum (Brid.) Mitt. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Accessed 30 August 2018

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

Harvill, A. M. (1949). Bryoxiphium in Alabama. The Bryologist, 52:137-139

Löve, A., and D. Löve. 1953. Studies on Bryoxiphium. The Bryologist 56: 183-203

Patiño, Jairo, Bernard Goffinet, Manuela Sim-Sim, and Alain Vanderpoorten. 2016. Is the sword moss (Bryoxiphium) a preglacial Tertiary relict? Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 96: 200-206.

Pursell, R. A. 2007. Bryoxiphiaceae. In: Flora of North America, North of Mexico 27: 329–330.


Habitat

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

A small patch on a vertical rock face that forms the creek bank; with Pellia appalachiana along the base of the rock.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

This Alabama sandstone rock shelter is in a small ravine about 200 ft from a stream.

Habitat

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

A somewhat exposed Alabama sandstone rock shelter about 50 ft from a stream. The next photo is a partial closeup.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

This particular Alabama occurrence, though rather extensive in covering the substrate, was not particularly photogenic.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

A tuft of healthy, shiny plants on a vertical rock face near the water's edge.

Habit

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

The arrows indicate female shoots with long perichaetial leaves at the shoot tips.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

Hanging stiffly from the sloped ceiling of a sandstone shelter.

Habit

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

Though perennial, the longevity of individual shoots is unknown.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

Leaves become very short at the base of the shoot; the lower most shoot is slightly twisted.

Morphology

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

A single leaf, the leaf blade is folded upwards, in half, lenthwise; leaf base is to the right

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

Tips of several leaves showing the costa and the lamella that projects from it, see labels in the upper image.

Morphology

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

Cross-sections across an entire shoot showing how the leaves are folded and imbricate; the leaves are stacked together like taco shells; the stem and the costa (c) of individual leaves are labeled in the lower image.

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Bryoxiphium norvegicum

This torn portion of the lower half of a leaf illustrates that cells become much longer towards the leaf margin and towards the leaf base.