Red Penny Moss
Rhizomnium punctatum
Thyme Moss family (Mniaceae)
Description:
This perennial evergreen moss is 1-3 cm. tall, forming loose colonies
of acrocarpous plants. The stems are erect, unbranched, and reddish
brown (below) to light green (above). In addition, there are brown to
black
fibrous rhizoids along the lower stems and extending sometimes to
the middle area of stems. However, these coarse rhizoids are not
present along the
upper stems of individual plants. The leaves are 3-5 mm. long, light
green to reddish green, obovate to oval-obovate in shape, entire
(toothless) along their margins, and sessile. The leaf margins are
translucent and either whitish or reddish. There is a single prominent
midrib along the middle of each leaf; this midrib is either whitish or
reddish and it terminates at either the tip of the leaf or slightly
below it. The leaves taper to wedge-shaped or slightly rounded
bases, while the outer
margins of the leaves are rounded and they often terminate abruptly
into very short narrow tips. Leaf cells are irregularly hexagonal in
shape, except along the margins and midribs of leaves, where they are
linear in shape.
Overall, a loose tuft of larger leaves occurs at the
tip of each stem, while more sparsely distributed smaller leaves occur
below. When the leaves are wet, they are relatively flat and spreading,
while dry leaves crumple and shrink in size. This moss is dioecious,
forming male and female reproductive organs on separate plants. Male
reproductive organs (antheridia) occur in a small shallow cup at the
apex of fertile male plants; this cup is surrounded by a whorl of leafy
bracts. These bracts closely resemble the leaves of this moss. The tiny
antheridia are oblongoid in shape and brown to black at maturity; each
antheridium consists of a packet of sperm. As a result of raindrop
logistics or some kind of animal disturbance,
the sperm can spread to other plants. When the
archegonium of a female plant is fertilized by sperm, it produces a
solitary spore-bearing capsule on a slender stalk (seta). The stalk is
about 20-30 mm. (¾–1¼") long, light green to orange-red, and ascending
to erect. At the apex of this stalk, the spore-bearing capsule is
either
drooping (pendulous) or horizontal. The capsule body and its lid
(operculum) are about 2–3.5 mm. long.
The capsule body is cylindrical-ellipsoid in shape, tapering at its
base. This capsule
becomes orange at maturity. The lid of the capsule body
is conical at the base, becoming more beak-shaped at its tip. When the
lid falls off, a ring of outer teeth (peristome) and inner teeth
(endostome) is revealed. These teeth are orange-colored and they
regulate the release of the spores to the wind (or they may be
transported by water). Both the lid and upper body of the capsule are
covered initially with a long-beaked membranous hood (calyptra), but it
soon
falls off. Individual spores are 30-40 micrometers across, globoid in
shape,
and very finely warty; they are above-average in size for a moss.
This moss also reproduces by forming clonal buds (gemmifera) from its
persistent protonema (mat of fibrous strands, representing the first
stage of development of a moss after spore-germination). Extending into
the substrate, there is
also a dense mat of brown to black rhizoids at the base of each plant.
Cultivation:
The preference is light to deep shade, wet conditions (but not
submergence in water), and sandstone rock, although this moss also
adapts to wet sand if moisture levels are relatively stable. Some
direct sunlight is tolerated in cooler boreal areas, but in Illinois
this moss requires shade.
Range
and Habitat: Red Penny Moss
(Rhizomnium punctatum) is uncommon in Illinois,
occurring in widely scattered locations throughout the state (see Distribution
Map).
This
moss is widely distributed in North America and Europe; it
tends to be more common in cooler boreal areas and mountainous areas.
In Illinois, habitats
include moist shaded rocks along streams, moist shaded sandstone walls
in woods, moist north-facing cliffs, and wet sandy ground along
woodland streams. In one isolated case, this moss was found on the
rungs of an old ladder. In Illinois, this moss most commonly occurs on
wet sandstone walls not far from streams inside a small rocky canyon or
a ravine. It often co-occurs with other mosses and leafy liverworts
in high quality natural areas.
Faunal
Associations: The larvae
of a crane fly, Tipula oropezoides, feeds on the
leaves of Red Penny
Moss (Rhizomnium punctatum) and probably other
mosses in eastern North
America (Wyatt & Stoneburner, 1989). It is possible that some
insects or other fauna may help to spread the larger-than-average
spores of this moss to new locations.
Photographic
Location:
A moist sandstone wall near a stream inside a large ravine in
west-central Indiana. Close-up photos were taken indoors with a
microscope.
Comments:
This moss has attractive delicate leaves. It is the most common species
of its genus in Illinois and the lower Midwest generally. Red Penny
Moss (Rhizomnium punctatum) can be readily
distinguished from two other
mosses, Rhizomnium magnifolium and Rhizomnium
pseudopunctatum, by the presence of fine rhizoids (looking
like brown fuzz) that extend along the
entire length of the stems of the latter two mosses. Red Penny Moss
only has coarse brown rhizoids that
extend upward to the lower or middle portion of its stems. Another
species, Rhizomnium appalachianum (Appalachian
Penny Moss), can be
distinguished by its larger leaves (7-11 mm. long) and the presence of
coarse brown rhizoids that extend along the entire length of its stems.
However, this latter species is not known to occur in Illinois at the
present time. It should be noted that North American populations of Red
Penny Moss are sometimes classified as the subspecies, Rhizomnium
punctatum chlorophyllosum, while European populations of this
moss are
classified as the typical subspecies, Rhizomnium punctatum
punctatum.
This is because North American populations of this moss tend to be
smaller in size than its European populations. An older scientific name
for this moss is Mnium punctatum. In Great Britain,
this moss is called Dotted Thyme Moss.