A revision of Grimmia (Grimmiaceae) from South Africa and Lesotho
Author
Eva Maier
Author
Michelle J. Price
Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, C. P. 60, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
michelle.price@ville-ge.ch
Author
Terry A. Hedderson
Bolus Herbarium, University of Cape Town, Private Bag, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa
text
Candollea
2017
2017-05-12
72
1
199
230
journal article
32146
10.15553/c2017v721a12
b2bae7e5-7a3f-4d18-b2b1-c445afbdb5e2
2235-3658
888344
Key to
Grimmia
species from South Africa and Lesotho
As plants are often collected without sporophytes, and when present the sporophytes are often in poor condition, we have utilised only gametophytic characters. (Plants should be examined in the wet state).
1. Cross section of costa at insertion with 7 or more guide cells (see
Fig. 8
G, H), in lamina with 2 guide cells sunken into narrow channel, their adaxial walls strongly thickened, at insertion with a small median band of substereids, interrupted by 3 groups or 1 large central group of hydroids that vanish in the apical part .............................. 6.
G. laevigata
1a. Costa cross section at insertion with fewer than 7 guide cells ...............................................................................
2
2. Costa cross section at insertion with 6 guide cells (see
Fig. 9
F); in lower lamina costa unevenly rounded and somewhat angulate as seen in surface view, indistinct in apical part of leaf; basal cells with transverse walls markedly thinner than longitudinal ...... 7.
G. longirostris
2a. Costa at insertion with 4 guide cells or with 4 guide cells of which the outer two are contiguous with the basal cells ..............................................................................
3
3. Costa at insertion with 4 guide cells, outer guide cells non-contiguous with the laminal cells .........................
4
3a. Costa at insertion with 4 guide cells, the two outer ones contiguous with the laminal cells (see
Fig. 3F, G
; 6G, H) .......................................................................
12
4. Basal paracostal cells (excluding marginal cells) nodulose.......................................................................
5
4a. Basal paracostal cells (including marginal cells) smooth .....................................................................................
8
5. Transverse section of leaf base not concave, leaf base with a marginal border (see
Fig. 5
F) of narrowly elongaterectangular, hyaline, thin walled cells in 3-4 rows, gradually transitioning to short-rectangular to quadrate cells but with outermost row ascending to above broadest part of leaf; margin recurved on one side from insertion to mid-leaf (see
Fig. 5
C, D); lamina unistratose (see
Fig. 5
H), rarely with bistratose patches..... 3.
G. elongata
5a. Transverse section of leaf base concave, plants otherwise ...
6
6. Transverse section of leaf above broadest part broadly keeled (see
Fig. 7
I), unistratose at insertion and leaf base, partially bistratose in laminal part, bistratose in apex; margin with several rows of bistratose cells; costa in transverse section (see
Fig. 7
I), with or without hydroids, cells in transitional part of leaf with walls smooth or sinuose (see
Fig. 7
H) .................................. 5.
G. kidderi
6a. Transverse section of leaf above broadest part not broadly keeled; plants lacking the above combination of characters ...............................................................................
7
7. Transverse section of costa at insertion with dorsal cell walls slightly bulging (see
Fig. 13
J, K), below mid-leaf with 2 narrowly elliptical median guide cells arranged obliquely to leaf axis; marginal cells partly bi-tristratose in 1-3 rows above the leaf base; laminal cells in transitional zone elongate-rectangular (see
Fig. 13
G, I), walls sinuose ................................................... 11.
G. pygmaea
7a. Transverse section of costa at insertion with dorsal cell walls bulging (see
Fig. 11
H), the guide cells rounded, arranged horizontally; margin unistratose or at most bistratose in 1 cell row on one side in apex; lamina cells in transitional zone short-rectangular or isodiametric with walls smooth or slightly sinuose (see
Fig. 11
G) .............. .............................................................. 9.
G. orbicularis
8. Cells in leaf base elongate-rectangular.........................
9
8a. Cells in leaf base short-rectangular............................
11
9. Basal cells of upper stem leaves elongate-rectangular (see
Fig. 14
D), with thickened transverse walls throughout; lower stem leaves with inner elongate rectangular and evenly thickened walls (see
Fig. 14
E), but with 2-3 marginal rows short-rectangular to quadrate cells and with thickened transverse walls; margin (transverse section) (see
Fig. 14
C) plane or occasionally recurved on one side from insertion to transitional zone (see
Fig. 14
F) ................................................ 12.
G. sessitana
9a. Cells of leaf base elongate-rectangular, hyaline with cell walls evenly thin, margins plane.................................
10
10. Costa in transverse section markedly stout in the lamina (see
Fig. 15
H), indistinct at apex, without hydroids but with abundant stereids; leaf forming a v-shape in crosssection in upper leaf................................ 13.
G. tortuosa
10a. Costa in transverse section not markedly stout in laminal part, distinct at apex; transverse section with hydroids, stereids absent but substereids usually present; leaf section otherwise in upper leaf............... 2.
G. donniana
11. Leaves abruptly lanceolate from ovate base (see
Fig. 10
B), thus with distinct shoulders, keeled (transverse section) from mid-leaf to apex (see
Fig. 10
H, I); in transverse section margin gradually incurved from base to apex (see
Fig. 10
D, I), lamina bistratose (see
Fig. 10
H, I), costa prominent above leaf base....................... 8.
G. montana
11a. Leaves broad-lanceolate or lanceolate from a short, ovate leaf base, keeled from leaf base to apex (transverse section) (see
Fig. 12
H, I), thus lacking distinct shoulders, in transverse section margin recurved on one side to above midleaf (see
Fig. 12
C), rarely on both sides and then with one side recurved only at middle of leaf; lamina unistratose from insertion to apex (see
Fig. 12
H), usually with marginal 1-2 cell rows that are bi- tristratose, occasionally only on one side and rarely unistratose (
Fig. 12
I), costa prominent throughout ..................................... 10.
G. pulvinata
12. Costa in dorsal view strikingly small and thin from insertion to broadest part of leaf (
Fig. 3B
), becoming stout and prominent towards the apex; transverse sections of costa in the upper stout portion with a group of hydroids (see
Fig. 3F, G
); leaf bases auriculate, decurrent (see
Fig. 3D
) ................................................ 1.
G. consobrina
12a. Costa in dorsal view weak at insertion and leaf base but enlarged throughout laminal part (
Fig. 6
B); above the broadest part of leaf the 2 median guide cells become narrowly elliptical and obliquely oriented to leaf axis (see
Fig. 6
G, H); hydroids sometimes present in leaf base (see
Fig. 6
H); leaf bases neither auriculate nor decurrent ........................................................ 4.
G. fuscolutea