Eagle Eyes on the Mosses

This lesson began on Black Friday, but I was waiting for a sloggy snow day to finish the assignment and today was such. Three more inches of snow and then, of course, rain. Ugh!

But, Black Friday was bright and brisk and while many people spent dollars and dollars shopping for the perfect Christmas gifts at supposedly discounted prices, some peeps from the Maine Master Naturalist Program and I joined Jeff Pengel and Alan Seamans for a Moss Foray in New Gloucester.

Among other things, they reminded us that mosses are divided into two groups based on their reproductive structure, and this I think I now know. Pluerocarps form spore capsules from side branches while Acrocarps are not as branched and the capsules arise from the tip of the stem or main branch.

We’d hardly walked fifty feet from the parking lot when the first subject was introduced. I love its common name: Electrified Cat-Tail Moss. This was a new one for me and the real quiz will be if I can find it on my own once the snow melts (though I do hope we get some more snow first).

The guys introduced us to a variety of mosses and a few liverworts, but . . .

one of my take aways was gaining an understanding of this blue-green growth under the arrow. I always thought it was algae. Not so. This is protonema, or germinating moss spores all tied together with filaments. We could not identify them to species yet, but their mossy leaves were starting to emearge here and there. Now I can’t wait to spot this again–and meet it all over for the first time.

As we moved along, and I think we determined in the end that we had traveled less than a quarter of a mile in the few hours we were together, I collected some specimens I wanted to get know better. Damp as they were, they put my all-weather field book to the test, and it’s now a bit warped. Ah, but so worth it.

Fast forward to today. The mosses found their way from the field book to petri dishes and all were labeled with common and scientific names. I’m feeling so efficient. For a brief moment.

And then it was on to a somewhat deep dive and so out came a 10X and 20X loupe, as well as the microscope. Let the fun begin.

Taking photos through the scope is an acquired skill and I’m working on it.

Up first: Electrified Cat-tail Moss, Rhytidiadelpus triquetrus. I can remember the common name, but am going to have to practice the scientific. Though the leaves grow outward in so many directions, thus giving it an electrified look, even as a dry specimen, it feels rather soft and fuzzy.

This is a pluerocarp that likes wet soil. The take aways for me are the orange stems and shaggy appearance.

Under the scope, I could see the pleats on leaves, which is another identifying feature.

Along a stream we found the next species, growing in another shaggy manner, though more upright than the Electrified Cat-tail. This is Lipstick Thyme Moss or Mnium hornum. It is an acrocarp.

I’m fascinated by the leaf cells that are equal-sided and look like snakeskin. Along the toothed margin the cells are elongated.

Though the common name of this next species is Tree Moss, it grows in moist areas and not on trees. But Climacium dendroides does resemble a tree in its growth form.

The leaves of this pluerocarp are overlapping and toothed.

They are so tighhtly arranged and didn’t let much light into the photo.

This next species has two common names: Wrinkled Broom Moss and Bad Hair Day Moss. I think I prefer the latter because that’s me every day.

The stems have conspicuously whitish or reddish tomentose (lots of filamentous rhizoids or hairs) and hold water.

Dicranum polysetum actually has more common names: Waxy Leaf and Wavy Leaf moss. It seems to fit all of its descriptors.

The final species was Delicate Fern Moss, Thuidium delicatulum. We found it, as is often the case, growing on a rotting stump. The leaf structure is very fern-like, thus making this one easy to identify even without Jeff and Alan as guides.

As a pluerocarp, the sporophytes would have formed in this curved capsule. In the fall, the operculum or lid covering on the capsule opened, releasing spores. Visible at the tip is the one ring of teeth located inside the mouth of the capsule and known as peristome.

Looking through the lenses and microscope offered a great way to get to know these mosses better, but slowing myself down to do some sketches may be the thing that solidifies them in my mind.

Even my guy noted that it’s been a while since I’ve actually made time to sketch. The real test will be if I can meet these friends in the wild and greet each one by name. I think I should earn bonus points if I can remember both the common and scientific names. Fingers crossed. And practice needed.

One needs eagle eyes to really learn the idiosyncrasies of bryophytes such as mosses, those tiny green plants with rhizoids, rather than roots, and no true vascular system.

As it was, on Black Friday, an immature Bald Eagle greeted us when we returned to the parking lot, all grateful for the time spent together learning from each other, and especially from Jeff and Alan.

A perfect ending to the perfect classroom shopping expedition.

7 thoughts on “Eagle Eyes on the Mosses

  1. How fun! I too love identifying life. My poor husband and hiking partner knows to just be patient, as I am forever stopping to examine and photograph flora and fauna! Love your photos, explanations, and most of all, your drawings. They are really quite good.
    Take care, be safe and stay warm! It is 26 below zero wind chill here in northern Illinois this am! I ventured out at dawn to feed the birds and squirrels poor things. Can’t wait for this week long cold spell to end! Kendra

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    1. Hi K, I think our husbands are similar as mine finds a rock or stump to sit on when we’re hiking and I spy something. Thanks for your note.
      The wind chill hasn’t been quite as bad here. At 6pm, it’s 20˚, but feels like 15˚.And snow is in the forecast for tomorrow, 1/16. Thankfully it will be cold, so should be fluffy snow this time. Not cement! Take care, Leigh

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  2. Leigh, I had to laugh out loud when you typed that your husband finds a rock or stump! I can so see that, just like mine.
    Yes, I always watch the weather in Maine now, since we visited a year ago last Sept. I see you are getting snow. It broke my heart to see on the news that the red brick bell house at the light house on Pemaquid Point was damaged by the huge waves a few days ago. We visited this site and the harbor there as my Cogswell family came to the colonies and landed just as the Great Hurricane of 1635 hit. Their ship, the Angel Gabriel was damaged and sunk, and the townspeople rescued everyone and cared for them until they could make arrangements. Almost all of my families’ money and belongings were lost but they survived and did well for themselves in Ipswich and elsewhere. I had not been to New England prior, and surely didn’t want to leave. Acadia National Park was wonderful, and we loved Camden and Rockport. Take care, and stay safe. Kendra

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    1. Kendra, I’m so glad you got to visit Pemaquid as it has played such an important part in your family’s story. We got about six inches of fluff out of this latest storm and I’m finally wearing snowshoes for my daily tramps. We probably have a foot of snow now, but under the fluff, it’s very crusty from all the rain. 9˚ now, with slight wind chill bringing it to -1˚. It’s been a long time since we’ve felt any negative numbers. We used to have two week stretches of bitter cold. Take care and if you ever return to Maine, check out our lakes and mountains. LMH

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      1. Will do, as our trip encompassed driving to Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, along with the states before and after on our drive from Illinois, I would like to do that trip again spending more time in ME. Although, there is more genealogy to do near Ipswich, I want to head south and explore Boston. So much to see! And, upstate New York, who knew it was such a lovely state!

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  3. Hi Leigh,  I’m  really enjoying your thoughtful posts, including this one.  And I’ve been amazed by the beautiful mosses around me.  Can you recommend a good field guide to start with?   Do you know this one

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    1. Thank you. Not sure what field guide you were referring to.
      I just wrote another post about mosses, and mentioned Ralph Pope’s Mosses, Liverworts and Hornworts.
      Another excellent source: Ecological Guide to Mosses & Common Liverworts of the Northeast by Sue Alix Williams.
      And Jerry Jenkin’s Mosses of the Northeast Forest
      And finally: Princeton Field Guide: Common Mosses of the Northeast and Appalachians.

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