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BFNA | Family List | BFNA Vol. 1 | Grimmiaceae | Grimmia

Grimmia montana Bruch & Schimper, Bryol. Europ. 3. 128. 1845.

Authors: Roxanne I. Hastings & Dr. Henk C. Greven

Plants in hoary cushions, yellow-green to dark blue-green, sometimes almost black. Stems 1--1.2(--1.5) cm, central strand weak. Stem leaves narrowly lanceolate, rarely ovate-lanceolate, 1--2 × 0.3--0.6 mm, concave-keeled, not plicate, margin plane, usually narrowly incurved distally, awn 0.2--1.3 mm, costal transverse section not prominent to prominent, terete; distal laminal cells 2-stratose, not bulging, marginal cells 2-stratose, not bulging; medial laminal cells rounded, thick-walled; basal juxtacostal laminal cells short- to long-rectangular, straight, thick-walled; basal marginal laminal cells quadrate to short-rectangular, straight, thick-walled, not hyaline. Perichaetial leaves not enlarged. Sexual condition dioicous. Seta straight, 2--3 mm. Capsule occasionally present, exserted, yellow to brown, oblong, exothecial cells rectangular, thin-walled, stomates absent, annulus of 1 row, quadrate, thick-walled, operculum rostellate, peristome present, fully developed, split and perforated in distal half.

Exposed acidic granite and sandstone; 900--4000 m; Greenland; Alta., B.C., Nunavut, Ont., Yukon; Alaska, Ariz., Calif., Col., Idaho, Mont., Nev., N.Mex., Oreg., Utah, Wash., Wyo.; Mexico; Europe; Africa.

Grimmia montana is widespread and common on acidic rock in the warm, dry, western interior of North America from southern British Columbia and Alberta southward to California and Colorado. It is very rare at higher latitudes with two outliers known from the southern Yukon and Alaska and a few populations from Greenland and Baffin Island. It is not known from the interior Great Plains, which are largely calcareous. As reported by J. Muñoz (1998b), it is surprisingly absent from seemingly suitable sites in eastern North America. Because its leaf margins can be either plane and/or incurved, Grimmia montana is most commonly confused with G. donniana and G. alpestris, which have plane and incurved margins, respectively. Grimmia montana is readily separated from G. donniana because it is dioicous and lacks stomates, whereas G. donniana is autoicous and has stomates. Gametophytically, G. montana has quadrate to short-rectangular basal marginal laminal cells with thickened transverse walls, while G. donniana has long-rectangular cells with thin walls. Separating G. montana and G. alpestris can be difficult; they have broadly overlapping distributions and both are dioicous and lack stomates. Grimmia alpestris usually has bulging, mammilose laminal cells that easily separate it from G. montana, but some stems have leaves that lack this feature. Specimens of G. montana can then be identified by their basal leaf areolation. The basal juxtacostal laminal cells of G. montana tend to be significantly longer than the marginal cells and the two regions are usually distinct. In contrast, G. alpestris tends to have a uniform basal areolation, composed of quadrate to short-rectangular cells.


 

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