Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness

Presented in Association with the
Western New Mexico University Department of Natural Sciences

Fossombronia pusilla (Linnaeus) Nees

Family: Fossombroniaceae

Status: Native

Synonyms:
None

This is the first New Mexico specimen in the genus Fossombronia found with sporophytes, and therefore identifiable to species. All Fossombronias have a cabbage-head like simple thallous morphology, differing on fine details of the spore ornamentation. Complicating matters is the unsettled taxonomy of the genus. Fossombronia pusilla has in the past been grouped with F. longiseta, but more recently is segregated based on the more widely spaced lamellae on the spore. F. pusilla differs from F. texana in not having conspicuous smaller ornamentations, as well as habitat. F. texana is found almost exclusively in limestone riverine habitat. We found F. pusilla on a forest trail on soil mixed with mosses in an area of volcanic origin in mixed conifer forest.
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Fossombronia pusilla, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018



Fossombronia pusilla, elater & spore, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018



Fossombronia pusilla, spores, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018



Fossombronia pusilla, thallus with emergent sporophyte, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018



Fossombronia pusilla, thalli among mosses, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018



Fossombronia pusilla, cellphone photo of appearance on trail, photo Karen Blisard & Russ Kleinman, Pinos Altos Range, McMillan Campground, September 4, 2018


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