Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Huperzia australiana has decumbent stems with densely tufted, erect branches up to 300 mm long, usually branched 2 or 3 times. The leaves are crowded, appressed to spreading, 5–9 mm long, 0.5–1.5 mm wide in the middle and tapering to a point.
Lycopodium (from Ancient Greek lykos, wolf and podion, diminutive of pous, foot) [2] is a genus of clubmosses, also known as ground pines or creeping cedars, [3] in the family Lycopodiaceae. Two very different circumscriptions of the genus are in use.
Pseudolycopodium (as Lycopodium deuterodensum) grows in open forest, scrub or heath in eastern New South Wales, southern Victoria, Tasmania (including Bass Strait Islands, Queensland, South Australia the North and Chatham Islands of New Zealand and in New Caledonia.
Lycopodium flabelliforme var. ambiguum Victorin Diphasiastrum digitatum is known as groundcedar, running cedar or crowsfoot , along with other members of its genus, but the common name fan clubmoss can be used to refer to it specifically.
A major cladistic study of land plants was published in 1997 by Kenrick and Crane. [1] In 2004, Crane et al. published some simplified cladograms, based on a number of figures in Kenrick and Crane (1997). Their cladogram for the lycophytes is reproduced below (with some branches collapsed into 'basal groups' to reduce the size of the diagram). [14]
Lycopodiopsida is a class of vascular plants also known as lycopsids, [1] lycopods, or lycophytes.Members of the class are also called clubmosses, firmosses, spikemosses and quillworts.
Austrolycopodium fastigiatum, synonym Lycopodium fastigiatum, commonly known as alpine club moss or mountain club moss, is a species of club moss native to New Zealand and Australia. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The genus Austrolycopodium is accepted in the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), [ 4 ] but not in other classifications which ...
Diphasiastrum complanatum. Diphasiastrum is a genus of clubmosses in the plant family Lycopodiaceae.In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), it is placed in the subfamily Lycopodioideae. [1]