Cephaloziella elachista

Marchantiophyta
Cephaloziella elachista (Nees) Schiffn. ex Loeske (Cephaloziellaceae)
Spurred threadwort
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Obscure

Distinguishing Features

One of two exclusively "Sphagnicolous" species in the genus, C. elachista is easily overlooked as wayward pale green hair or algae-like strands (< 1/4 mm wide to cms long) weaving their way through Sphagnum in open boggy areas. Maybe with a hand lens but more likely with a microscope, you will see deeply divided 2-lobed leaves with sharp apices and tooth-like projections arising from their base. Under the microscope, the lobes themselves are 2-4 cells wide at their base, with teeth restricted to that lower margin and thin leaf cell walls.

Similar species

At the small scale and specialized habitat that C. elachista grows in, only species of Cephalozia, Fuscocephaloziopsis and Cephaloziella could be confused. The first two genera are typically "bigger" plants, with leafy shoots measuring >.5 mm wide and the leaves themselves visibly wider than said shoots. Leafy shoots of C. elachista are ~1/4 mm wide and the leaves themselves narrower than the shoots. Cephaloziella divaricata can grow in the same habitat, but its leaves are only divided to half their length, while those of C. elachista are divided almost to their base. C. spinigera also occurs in the same habitat and is impossible to distinguish without a microscope– its leaf cells are wider (9-12 um) and its cell walls thinner than those of C. elachista (see photo).

Habitat

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Associated species

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[1] "no GBIF data to display"