Polytrichum

Polytrichum
Male gametophytes bearing antheridia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Bryophyta
Class: Polytrichopsida
Order: Polytrichales
Family: Polytrichaceae
Genus: Polytrichum
Hedw.

Polytrichum is a genus of mosses — commonly called haircap moss or hair moss — which contains approximately 70 species that have a cosmopolitan distribution. The genus Polytrichum has a number of closely related sporophytic characters. The scientific name is derived from the Ancient Greek words polys, meaning "many", and thrix, meaning "hair". This name was used in ancient times to refer to plants with fine, hairlike parts, including mosses, but this application specifically refers to the hairy calyptras found on young sporophytes. A similar naming related to hair appears in Old Norse, haddr silfjar, "hair of Sif", goddess from Norse Mythology, wife of the god Thor. There are two major sections of Polytrichum species. The first — section Polytrichum — has narrow, toothed, and relatively erect leaf margins. The other — section Juniperifolia — has broad, entire, and sharply inflexed leaf margins that enclose the lamellae on the upper leaf surface.[1][2]

Anatomy of Polytrichum formosum plant.
  1. ^ Smith Merrill, Gary L. (2007), "Polytrichum", Flora of North America, vol. 27, Oxford University Press
  2. ^ Crum, Howard Alvin; Anderson, Lewis Edward (1981), Mosses of Eastern North America, Columbia University Press, pp. 1281–1282, ISBN 0-231-04516-6