View allAll Photos Tagged Bryopsida

SERIE: intanto che scattavo questi primi piani delle piccole colonie di muschio verde, un uccellino mi deliziava con il suo canto dall'alto degli alberi spogli, vedere qui sotto.

 

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Sorry, to me is very difficult to visit people that always only leave a fav without commenting...

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Drück mich • touch me 🔍

Die fast stets zahlreich gebildeten Kapseln stehen aufrecht auf einem 1-2 cm langen Kapselstiel.

Drück mich • touch me 🔍

Die fast stets zahlreich gebildeten Kapseln stehen aufrecht auf einem 1-2 cm langen Kapselstiel.

Quasi primavera

  

Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.

All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci

An unidentified seedpod rests on a luscious bed of Pincushion Moss (Leucobryum glaucum).

Sporophytes de Bryopsida en sous-bois.

Ma page Facebook : www.facebook.com/BaladesSauvages/

Wood Bristle-moss (Lewinskya affinis, formerly Orthotrichum affinis, Bryophyta, Orthotrichaceae) on small branches of Sambucus. Very common at Walenhoek reserve (Niel, Belgium, 19 March 2023).

 

Focus stack of 35 images; assembled in Zerene Stacker (Dmap & Pmax). Sony A7RM5 (apsc mode), FE 2.8/90 Macro G OSS; ISO-100, f/3.2, 1/40sec, -0.7step, diffused natural light.

LA: Syntrichia ruralis [Syn: Tortula ruralis]

EN: Star moss / Twisted moss

DE: Dach-Drehzahnmoos

HU: Háztetőmoha

 

Erdöspusztai Arborétum, Bánk, Debrecen, Hungary

 

Fluorescence Kit: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/excitation-filters-for-f...

  

Illuminated with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging-product...

  

Imaged with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/the-macropod/

  

MORE INFORMATION

  

Images in this gallery were captured by:

  

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Chad Fagan B.S. Geoscientist

chad@macroscopicsolutions.com

Inflorescences on male plants / Соцветия на мужских побегах.

 

Это двудомное растение. Мужские экземпляры кукушкина льна имеют характерное расположение листьев на верхушке стеблей. Здесь образуются розеточки, имеющие красноватую окраску. На женских растениях развиваются коробочки на длинных ножках, покрытые волосистыми колпачками. Они напоминают кукушку, сидящую на шесте. Отсюда и название мха - кукушкин лен.

3/23/07

Seahurst Beach Park, Burien, Washington, U.S.A.

Aulacomnium androgynum

A very tiny, unusual moss growing on a well-rotted driftwood log well above high-tide line at beach. The round structures are gemmae, a vegetative reproduction method. (Thank you GORGEous nature!!!)

Kingdom: Plantae (Plants)

Division: Bryophyta (Mosses)

Subdivision: Musci

Class: Bryopsida (True Mosses)

Subclass: Bryidae

Order: Bryales

Family: Aulacomniaceae

Genus: Aulacomnium (Aulacomnium Moss)

Species: androgynum

(Aulacomnium androgynum) Aulacomnium Moss

Dach-Drehzahnmoos / star moss

 

(Syntrichia ruralis)

(Bryopsida)

Hopefully to be identified.

Cut from the previous photo with a detail of the web between stalks with capsules.

 

Hradišťany, Czech Republic

Klasse: Bryopsida

Unterklasse: Dicranidae

Ordnung: Pottiales

Familie: Pottiaceae

Gattung: Drehzahnmoose (Tortula)

Art: Mauer-Drehzahnmoos

Wissenschaftlicher Name

Tortula muralis

 

Class: Bryopsida

Subclass: Dicranidae

Order: Pottiales

Family: Pottiaceae

Type: Rotary tooth mosses (Tortula)

Kind: Wall-rotary tooth moss

Scientific name

Tortula muralis

 

Fluorescence Kit: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/excitation-filters-for-f...

  

Illuminated with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging-product...

  

Imaged with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/the-macropod/

  

MORE INFORMATION

  

Images in this gallery were captured by:

  

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Chad Fagan B.S. Geoscientist

chad@macroscopicsolutions.com

Fluorescence Kit: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/excitation-filters-for-f...

  

Illuminated with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product-category/imaging-product...

  

Imaged with: macroscopicsolutions.com/product/the-macropod/

  

MORE INFORMATION

  

Images in this gallery were captured by:

  

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

  

Chad Fagan B.S. Geoscientist

chad@macroscopicsolutions.com

Tentative ID. Would also love to know what the thread-like things are.

So lush! Think this is mostly Rambling Tail-Moss, Anomodon viticulosus. On sandstone.

Processed with VSCO with ss1 preset

Orlando Wetlands Park, Orange County, FL, November 2021.

Charles H. Bronson State Forest, Joshua Creek Tract, Orange County, FL, March 2015

Dach-Drehzahnmoos / star moss

 

(Syntrichia ruralis)

(Bryopsida)

 

www.flickr.com/photos/c_kalk-photography/albums

Bryum sp. (moss) spore capsule peristome

(10x).

 

In mosses, the peristome is a specialized structure in the sporangium that allows for gradual spore discharge, instead of releasing them all at once.

 

Most mosses produce a capsule with a lid (the operculum) which falls off when the spores inside are mature and thus ready to be dispersed. The opening thus revealed is called the stoma (meaning "mouth") and is surrounded by one or two peristomes. Each peristome is a ring of triangular "teeth" formed from the remnants of dead cells with thickened cell walls. There are usually 16 such teeth in a single peristome, separate from each other and able to both fold in to cover the stoma as well as fold back to open the stoma. This articulation of the teeth is termed arthrodontous and is found in the moss subclass Bryopsida. In other groups of mosses, the capsule is either nematodontous with an attached operculum (as in the Polytrichopsida), or else splits open without operculum or teeth.

 

There are two subtypes of arthrodontous peristome.[1] The first is termed haplolepidous and consists of a single circle of 16 peristome teeth. The second type is the diplolepidous peristome fround in subclass Bryidae. In this type, there are two rings of peristome teeth—an inner endostome (short for endoperistome) and an exostome. The endostome is a more delicate membrane, and its teeth are aligned between the teeth of the exostome. There are a few mosses in the Bryopsida that have no peristome in their capsules. These mosses still undergo the same cell division patterns in capsule development, but the teeth do not fully develop.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peristome

  

Tarkemmin määrittämätön hiirensammal (Bryum sp) Kirkkonummen Lähteelästä, vanhasta sammaloituneesta aitan kivijalasta. Kuvattu 18.03.2015.

 

Itiöpesäkkeen suuaukon leveys 0.4 mm. Yksittäisten itiöiden leveys 10 micronia.

   

A dense clump of Pincushion Moss (Lycobryum glaucum) provides a microhabitat beneath an open oak canopy, with assorted dead tree leaves, leaves of grass both dead and alive, and sticks of various sizes in variable states of decay.

Musgo Leucodon sciuroides.

 

Clase:Bryopsida

Subclase:Bryidae

Orden:Hypnales

Familia:Leucodontaceae

Género:Leucodon

 

Esta foto tiene derechos de autor. Por favor, no la utilice sin mi conocimiento y autorización. Gracias.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

 

Maturing sporophytes of Menzies' Tree Moss, Leucolepis acanthoneuron.

 

Keats Island, BC, Canada

Habitat: coastal Douglas-fir forest

Nikon D7100 + Tamron 90mm VC USD f:2.8 + SB900 strobe

The Netherlands - Noordhollands Duinreservaat

In autumn and especially winter, when most herbaceous plants and trees are in an energy-saving, low power mode, mosses are at their best and really stand out. One of the most common mosses in our country is the hair moss Polytrichum formosum (Fraai haarmos). © Tom Kisjes

Flechten / Lichen Cladonia coniocraea (Flörke) Spreng.

This is the tiny sporophyte of Kindbergia oregana, a very common Pacific Northwest moss which grows in lush carpets over the ground, rocks, and maples on Keats Island. The outer row of teeth in the sporangium are hygroscopic - they move in response to humidity. When the air is dry and perfect for spore dispersal, the teeth flick outwards, throwing spores into the wind.

Gekräuseltes Spiralzahnmoos

(Frizzled Crisp-moss)

Blatt

Dorsalseite Rippe glatt, ventralseite Rippe teilweise papillös; Blatt meist auch deutlich querwellig; 7mm lang; typisch der V-förmige Übergang von hyalinen Basiszellen zu papillösen Laminazellen

TK5407 Altenahr

 

Superdomain: Neomura

Domain: Eukaryota

(unranked): Archaeplastida

Kingdom: Plantae

Division: Bryophyta

Class: Bryopsida

Subclass: Dicranidae

Order: Pottiales

Family: Pottiaceae

Subfamily: Pottioideae

Genus: Syntrichia

Species: S. intermedia

Chuluota Wilderness Area, Seminole County, FL, January 2018.

Gewoon muursterretje (Tortula muralis), Stack van 55 opnamen

3/23/07

Seahurst Beach Park, Burien, Washington, U.S.A.

Aulacomnium androgynum

A very tiny, unusual moss growing on a well-rotted driftwood log well above high-tide line at beach. The round structures are gemmae, a vegetative reproduction method. (Thank you GORGEous nature!!!)

Kingdom: Plantae (Plants)

Division: Bryophyta (Mosses)

Subdivision: Musci

Class: Bryopsida (True Mosses)

Subclass: Bryidae

Order: Bryales

Family: Aulacomniaceae

Genus: Aulacomnium (Aulacomnium Moss)

Species: androgynum

(Aulacomnium androgynum) Aulacomnium Moss

While walking through the woods I saw a dark place where was the stump covered with a moss. The stump was beautifully illuminated through the crack between the trees. The HDR image was created from seven different frames to capture the scene authentically. Used exposure compensations: -3, -2, -1, 0, +1, +2 and +3 EV.

 

Exif information is from the intermediate photo.

 

Hradišťany, Czech Republic

Genus Orthotrichum, A member of True Mosses, (Class Bryopsida)

Superdomain: Neomura

Domain: Eukaryota

(unranked): Archaeplastida

Kingdom: Plantae

Division: Bryophyta

Class: Bryopsida

Subclass: Bryidae

Order: Hypnales

Family: Hylocomiaceae

Genus: Rhytidiadelphus

Species: R. squarrosus

2011-09-17 Upper Austria, district Rohrbach/OÖ - Zimmermoos (720 msm Quadrant 7448/2).

The uprooted tree as well as most trees in the background is Picea abies (in a habitat where, naturally, a mixed forest of spruce, fir and beech should dominate, so not quite as natural a habitat as it looks).

The moss species present here however are both typical and native for this habitat. Most prominent one here is Polytrichum formosum as well as some other (unidentified) Polytrichum species, then one Plagiochila asplenioides (?!), a few Hylocomium splendens mixed in (none prominent in the foreground), and in the background (in bokeh) there's also some Sphagnum species present.

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