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Crumia latifolia

Crumia latifolia (Kindb.) Schof.  
Family: Pottiaceae
Crumia latifolia image
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Richard H. Zander in Flora of North America (vol. 27)
Stems sparsely radiculose; rounded-pentagonal in section. Leaf with costal abaxial cells elongate. Sporophytes 1(-2) per perichaetium. Seta reddish brown in color, ca. 1.4 mm, twisted clockwise below, counterclockwise above. Capsule with reddish brown theca, peristome teeth of 7 articulations held together by a hyaline membrane. Calyptra ca. 3 mm.

Sporophytes mature spring-summer (May, Jun, Jul). Limestone, calcareous shale, siliceous and conglomeritic rock, roadbank, wet areas; low to moderate elevations (5-1200 m); B.C.; Ariz., Calif., Mont., Oreg., Utah, Wash.

Often locally abundant, Crumia latifolia is sometimes reddish orange in exposed situations. The morphology and ecology of this species are discussed at length by S. Flowers (1973), W. B. Schofield (1966), and A. J. Grout (1928-1940, vol. 1). There is great variation in the thickness and color of the laminal cell walls, possibly correlated with degree of exposure. It has been found in fruit in British Columbia and two stations in California.

Crumia latifolia
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