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Taper-leaved Earth-moss - Pleuridium acuminatum
This moss forms mid-green or brownish-tinged patches which can be dense, but are often open aggregations of shoots. They are short, to 1 cm, but often less, with the upper leaves much longer than the lower (about 4 mm as opposed to about 1.5 mm), usually erect and occasionally slightly turned to one side. The leaves are spearhead-shaped, tapering relatively gradually from a base that is egg-shaped to a long, fine tip in the upper leaves where it is composed mainly of the excurrent nerve. Capsules are common, held on a very short seta, 1 mm long, hidden between the upper leaves and are shortly oval with a blunt point. P. acuminatum has naked male organs in the leaf axils.
A pioneer species of bare soil. P. acuminatum tends to favour more acidic ground.
All year round.
Fairly frequent and widespread in Britain.
Fairly frequent in Leicestershire and Rutland.
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Species profile
- Common names
- Taper-leaved Earth-moss
- Species group:
- Mosses & Liverworts
- Kingdom:
- Plantae
- Order:
- Dicranales
- Family:
- Ditrichaceae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 1
- First record:
- 01/03/2009 (Woodward, Steve)
- Last record:
- 01/03/2009 (Woodward, Steve)
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