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Didymodon giganteus

Didymodon giganteus (Funck) Jur.  
Family: Pottiaceae
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Richard H. Zander in Flora of North America (vol. 27)
Plants red-brown. Stems often 3-5 cm, central strand present. Stem leaves appressed when dry, spreading or weakly recurved and keeled when moist, monomorphic, elliptic-lanceolate, adaxially grooved along costa, (2-)2.5-4 mm, base scarcely differentiated in shape to elliptic, margins nearly broadly recurved in proximal 1/3-3/4 of leaf, entire, apex acute or gradually acuminate, not fragile; costa percurrent, tapering and distinctly widened at base, widened pad of cells absent, adaxial costal cells elongate, 5-7 cells wide at mid leaf, guide cells in 1 layer; basal laminal cells differentiated medially, rectangular, walls thickened and porose; distal laminal cells 13-15 µm wide, 1:1 or occasionally transversely elongated, papillae absent or simple, low, present only on the back of the leaf near the apex, lumens angular, walls irregularly thickened and trigonous with trigones about the same size as the lumens, weakly convex on both sides, 1-stratose. Specialized asexual reproduction specialized structures absent. Sexual condition sterile. Sporophytes not seen. Distal laminal KOH reaction dark red.

Soil, cliff, slopes, lichen tundra, ledges, moist areas; low to moderate elevations (20-1000 m); B.C., N.W.T.; Alaska; Europe; Asia.

Didymodon giganteus commonly forms large tufts on slopes and ledges in the far North. Several specimens, collected in Alaska, have been seen with the above combination of characters, which is that of European specimens. Many collections, however, that had been previously identified as this species but having weak trigones are either D. ferrugineus or D. maximus.

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