Riccia fluitans
| Common Name | Floating crystalwort |
| Frequency | Infrequent |
Image Gallery
Distinguishing Features
Infrequent but abundant where it does occur, this aquatic, narrow, and elongate Riccia floats in tangles of duckweed and other aquatic plants. The thallus can grow up to 3cm long but is always very narrow (<5mm) and marked by interweaving lines on its upper surface. It should be noted R. fluitans can grow in terrestrial habitats, especially those that fringe water bodies.
Similar species
Ricciocarpos natans is another aquatic thalloid liverwort, but it has a very wide thallus and forms rosettes, lacking the linear form of R. fluitans. Riccia rhenena, a taxon often treated as a subspecies, is indistinguishable without detailed microscopy.
Habitat
Floating (subsurface) in nutrient- or mineral-rich, stagnant or slow-moving water of lakeshores, ponds, marshes, and ditches, or stranded on muddy shorelines, in the lowland, steppe, and montane zones; locally frequent in sc and sw BC, rare in ne BC [n Rocky Mts.].
Associated species
Ricciocarpos natans, Duckweed
Distribution Map
Relevant Literature
- Godfrey, J.D. (1977). Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of southwestern British Columbia . [Doctoral dissertation, University of British Columbia]. UBC cIRcle.
- Hong, W. S. (2007). Scapania. In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (Eds.), Flora of North America North of Mexico (Vol. 3) . Oxford University Press.
- Wagner, D. H. (2013). Guide to the liverworts of Oregon: Scapania undulata . Oregon State University Herbarium.