However, the trees of the park were rather good for epiphytes, with virtually all of the common species being present. The most surprising for me were some rather small tufts of O. lyellii on a birch trunk - an unusual host? The purplish gemmae are just about visible in the enlarged pic, but were very obvious through a lens.
Orthotrichum lyellii on birch |
Also, can someone please put me out of my misery and tell me what the moss below is. It was growing on the base of a Sycamore in open woodland. I thought it was B. erythrophyllum at first, but the leaf margins are plane above, so I'm puzzled. The upper leaf cells are papillose. Thanks!
Looks a bit like a straight-leaved D. insulanus, but not sure?
ReplyDeleteThanks Barry, that did cross my mind. Leaves also rather short for that species, only about 2mm. Any further suggestions anyone?
ReplyDeleteI thought D insulanus too - it is pretty frequent on floodzone trees. An alternative suggestion is D. spadiceus (though I prefer seeing capsules on that one). Can't remember which way round the adaxial costa cells are on that one.
ReplyDeleteThanks both - it wasn't on a flood zone tree, but I think it is probably insulanus (I've already recorded it in that tetrad anyway).
ReplyDelete