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Family: Selaginellaceae
[Bernhardia spinosa Gray, moreLycopodioides selaginoides Kuntze, Lycopodium selaginoides L., Selaginella spinosa Beauv., Selaginella spinosa subsp. bahusiensis Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. borealis Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. bothnica Gdgr, Selaginella spinosa subsp. delphinensis Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. earthusiana Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. frigida Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. glacialis Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. herjedaliensis Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. hibernica Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. imbricaria Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. jugicola Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. litigiosa Gdgr, Selaginella spinosa subsp. ludibunda Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. nemoricola Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. norvegica Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. orthophylla Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. parvula Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. patens Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. pyrenaica Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. scotica Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. vallesiaca Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. vieina Gand., Selaginella spinosa subsp. viridissima Gand., Selaginella spinosa var. minor Spring, Selaginella spinulosa A. Br., Selaginella spirosa subsp. mediana Gand.] |
Plants on rock or terrestrial, forming loose to dense mats. Stems not readily fragmenting, tips not upturned; creeping stems filiform, indeterminate, branching dichotomously; upright stems stout, unbranched (3--10 cm aboveground), terminating in simple strobili. Leaves green, lanceolate, 3--4.5 X 0.75--1.2 mm (smaller on horizontal stems, 1/3 less than those on upright stems); abaxial groove absent; base decurrent, forming saclike structure with stem; margins with soft spiny projections, 0.1--0.2 mm; apex acuminate to subulate. Strobili (1--)2--3(--5) cm; sporophylls lanceolate-triangular, 4.5--6 X 1.15--1.5 mm, lacking abaxial ridges. 2 n = 18. Wet places, among mossy stream banks, lakeshores, bogs, and wet talus slopes, in neutral to alkaline soil; 600--2900(--3800) m; Greenland; St. Pierre and Miquelon; Alta., B.C., Man., N.B., Nfld., N.W.T., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que., Sask., Yukon; Alaska, Colo., Idaho, Maine, Mich., Minn., Mont., Nev., N.Y., Wis., Wyo.; Eurasia; nw Africa in the Canary Islands. Selaginella selaginoides is reported to have strobili with basal megasporangia and apical microsporangia (H. T. Horner Jr. and H. J. Arnott 1963). Some individuals, however, have megasporangia at the tip of the strobili. Selaginella selaginoides is generally thought to be a primitive member of the genus (F. O. Bower 1908; T. L. Phillips and G. A. Leisman 1966; R. M. Tryon 1955), but certain of its characteristics may be derived. It is unique in having an active megaspore dispersal mechanism, termed 'compression and slingshot megaspore ejection' (C. N. Page 1989), and it has a peculiar root position and development (E. E. Karrfalt 1981) probably found elsewhere only in the closely related species S . deflexa Brackenridge of Hawaii. Both features may be derived rather than primitive.
Sterile stems prostrate, mostly 2-5 cm, without rhizophores; fertile stems erect, 6-10(-20) cm, 0.4-0.5 mm thick (excl. lvs); lvs spirally arranged, ascending or spreading, thin, lanceolate, remotely spinulose-toothed, acuminate, not bristle-tipped, to 4 נ1 mm; cones subcylindric, mostly 1.5-3 cm, to 5 mm wide, the sporophylls mostly 10-ranked, larger and more prominently spinulose than the lvs; megaspores pale yellowish, 0.5 mm wide, with low tubercles on the commissural faces; 2n=18. Open rocks and wet banks; circumboreal, s. to N.S., n. Mich., n. Minn., and Nev. Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp. ©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission. |