Ricciocarpos Natans Fringed Heartwort

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Ricciocarpos Natans Fringed Heartwort Marchantiales Ricciocarpos natans Fringed Heartwort 8 mm Floating form 4 mm Identification This small thallose liverwort has both floating and terrestrial forms. Floating plants consist of small, yellow-green to dark green or reddish-tinged, duckweed (Lemna)- like rosettes 5–15 mm diameter. Thalli have a conspicuous fringe of violet, spreading ventral scales with a finely toothed margin protruding from beneath the lobes. The heart-shaped thalli branch regularly in a Y-like fashion, with each branch of a pair approximately equal in size to its twin branch, and each thallus ending in 2 broadly rounded lobes. Inconspicuous dots (air pores) lie on the upper surface, surrounded by lines arranged in a delicate network. Terrestrial plants are often more pigmented, with much smaller ventral scales than in floating plants.R. natans is only known non-fertile in the British Isles, unlike most Riccia species. Similar species Floating forms are more likely to be confused with the vascular plant duckweed (Lemna) at first glance, but duckweeds are smooth, and lack ventral scales. Floating Riccia species (Riccia fluitans, p. 261, and Riccia rhenana, Paton, p. 583) have narrow, linear thalli about 1 mm wide. Terrestrial forms could be confused with Riccia cavernosa (p. 263) and Riccia crystallina (p. 262), but those species lack a median groove or have one only at the branch tips, and the upper thallus surface soon disintegrates and becomes conspicuously spongy. Riccia huebeneriana (p. 264, which has grooved branches like R. natans) differs in its narrow, usually reddish branches and older parts becoming spongy. Habitat This southern species is found floating in mineral-rich pools, ditches, canals and drains, sometimes on slow-flowing streams, often where the water is calcareous, or on mud at the water’s edge. 260 Photos Fred Rumsey (left) & John Birks (right) Text David Long.
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