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Dicranum

  • Family name: Dicranaceae
  • Common name: Dicranum moss
  • Growth form: Moss
  • Names used on the Toolik-Arctic Geobotanical Atlas maps:
    • Circumpolar Arctic Vegetation Map: Dicranum
    • Arctic Alaska Tundra Vegetation Map: Dicranum spp.
    • Imnavait Creek Permanent Plots: Dicranum sp.
    • Happy Valley Permanent Plots: Dicranum sp.

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  1. Dicranum    , Dicranum moss
  2. Dicranum scoparium, example species. This group was found in a mature forest growing on an old cedar log.
    Cliff Gilker Park, Roberts Creek, British Columbia, Canada, April 2003.
    Image author: Lyrae Emerson ©
    Website: BC Biodiversity
    Please contact lyrae@telus.net before using image
    Source of original image

  1. Dicranum    , Dicranum moss
  2. Dicranum fuscescens
    Europe, 2005
    Image author: Michael Lüth ©
    Website: Michael Lüth
    See also: Michael Lüth
    Please contact Please contact Michael Lüth for permission to use before using image
    Source of original image

  1. Dicranum    , Dicranum moss
  2. Dicranum fuscescens, example species
    Ceredigion, Wales; 13-19 April 2005;
    Image author: British Bryological Society ©
    Website: British Bryological Society
    Source of original image

  1. Dicranum    , Dicranum moss
  2. Dicranum scoparium, example species for Dicranum, Picea abies seedlings in a Dicranum (most likely D. scoparium) carpet
    1996
    Image author: P. Brang ©
    Website: Forest Knowledge Net, Information for Forest Management
    Source of original image

  1. Dicranum    , Dicranum moss
  2. Dicranum scoparium, example species. This is a prominent moss in many habitats, being tolerant of a wide range of conditions, from acid to neutral. Its leaves are long and tapering to fine points, and toothed towards their tips. A nerve runs the entire length of the leaf, and groups of orange-brown cells occur in the basal angles. The stems are erects, with the leaves often tending to curve in one direction (a condition known as secund). In woodlands, may be confused with the close relative, Dicranum majus.
    Image author: Alan Hale ©
    Website: Mosses and Liverworts in Wales
    Source of original image

  • For more information about this plant: