Overview
Plants erect, in loose to dense tufts, green to yellow-brown, glossy to somewhat dull. Stems 1-5(-8) cm, erect-spreading, simple or branching, radiculose proximally. Leaves lanceolate from an ovate base, gradually narrowed to abruptly subulate, crisped and curled when dry; margins plane or revolute, entire or often toothed at apex; costa strong, percurrent to slightly excurrent, narrow, with 2 stereid bands; distal
Species ca. 6: North America, Europe, Asia.
Oncophorus is frequently encountered near stream habitats. The species may be confused with those of Dicranum, Dicranella, or Kiaeria, but are distinguished by distinctively strumose capsules and abruptly subulate leaves, which are strongly crisped-contorted when dry.[1]
Taxonomy
The Genus Oncophorus is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 32 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in the Genus Oncophorus: O. alpestris · O. cerviculatus · O. compactus · O. crispatus · O. crispifolius · O. cyathicarpus · O. dichotomus · O. elongatus · O. falcatus · O. fragilis · O. fuegianus · O. gracilentus · O. gracilescens · O. longirostris · O. luteovirens · O. polycarpus · O. rauei · O. raui (Oncophorus Moss) · O. sardous · O. schisti · O. sinensis · O. striatus · O. strumifer · O. strumulosus · O. tenellus · O. torquescens · O. virens (Oncophorus Moss) · O. virens nigrescens · O. virens serratus · O. virens var. serratus · O. wahlenbergii (Wahlenberg's Oncophorus Moss) · O. wahlenbergii var. compactus
Bibliography
- Allen, B. H. 2000. The genus Oncophorus (Musci: Dicranaceae) in Maine. Evansia 17: 1-5.
Footnotes
- Steven G. Newmaster "Oncophorus". in Flora of North America Vol. 27 Page 360, 377, 421, 423, 431. Oxford University Press. Online at EFloras.org.
Sources
- The distribution map on the Distribution tab comes from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and is used with permission.
- Photographs on this page are copyrighted by individual photographers, and individual copyrights apply.
- The technology underlying this page, including the controls behind Keep Exploring, is owned by the BayScience Foundation. All rights are reserved.
