The following relationships have been collated from the published literature (see 'Interaction References').
Filters:
Affected Part | Summary | Taxon | Vernacular | Classification | References | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gametophyte is associate of fruitbody | Dictyonema coppinsii | a lichenised bracket fungus | Agaricales: Hygrophoraceae | Checklist of the British and Irish Basidiomycota, Legon, N.W. & Henrici, A. with Roberts, P.J., Spooner, B.M. & Watling, R., 2005 |
||||
is associate of fruitbody | Loreleia postii | a toadstool | Hymenochaetales | Profiles of Fungi No. 2: Gerronema postii, Spooner, B.M., 1987 |
Author & Year | Title | Source |
---|---|---|
Legon, N.W. & Henrici, A. with Roberts, P.J., Spooner, B.M. & Watling, R., 2005 | Checklist of the British and Irish Basidiomycota | 517pp, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew |
Spooner, B.M., 1987 | Profiles of Fungi No. 2: Gerronema postii | Mycologist Vol 01 (1): 19. |
Subtaxon | Rank | Featured subtaxa |
No of interactions |
No of references |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class | 1 references | ||||||
Class | 85 subtaxa | 269 trophisms | 34 references | ||||
Class | 6 subtaxa | 41 trophisms | 1 references | ||||
Class | 5 subtaxa | 75 trophisms | 13 references |
Phylum | BRYOPHYTA (mosses) |
Subkingdom | VIRIDIPLANTAE (lower green plants) |
Kingdom | PLANTAE (plants) |
Domain | Eukaryota (eukaryotes) |
Life | BIOTA (living things) |
NBN (data.nbn.org.uk) has a distribution map for BRYOPHYTA (mosses) |
BRYOPHYTA (mosses) may also be included in identification literature listed under the following higher taxa:
Author | Year | Title | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Anon. | 2010 | The Plant List | www.theplantlist.org/ |
Anon. | IBRIS - International Bryophyte Research Information Service | ||
Hill, M.O., Preston, C.D., Bosanquet, S.D.S. & Roy, D.B. | 2007 | BRYOATT: Attributes of British and Irish Mosses, Liverworts and Hornworts | 88pp, NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology |
Porley, R. & Hodgetts, N. | 2005 | Mosses and Liverworts | New Naturalist, 480pp, HarperCollins |
Preston, C.D., Blackstock, T.H., Bosanquet, S.D.S., Godfrey, M.F., Hill, M.O., Holyoak, D.T. & Rothero, G.P. | 2012 | Bryophyte Recording Handbook | 25pp, British Bryological Society |
Watson, E.V. | 1967 | The Structure and Life of Bryophytes | Hutchinson University Library, 2nd edition edition, 192pp, Hutchinson of London |
Journals | |||
Journal of Bryology | |||
Field Bryology | British Bryological Society | ||
The American Bryological and Lichenological Society, Inc. | The Bryologist | Published for/by:The American Bryological and Lichenological Society, Inc. | |
Moss Gardening | |||
Fletcher, M. | 2006 | Moss Grower’s Handbook | 87pp, British Bryological Society |
Nature Conservation | |||
Hodgetts, N.G. | 1996 | Conservation of Lower Plants in Woodland | 32pp, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Peterborough |
Regional Studies | |||
Proctor, M.C.F. | 1960 | Mosses and Liverworts of the Malham District | Field Studies 1(2): 61-85. |
Societies | |||
British Bryological Society |
Literature listed under the following higher taxa may also be relevant to BRYOPHYTA (mosses):
BioImages (www.bioimages.org.uk) has 1,747 images of BRYOPHYTA (mosses) |
Photographing spores can be difficult, especially under oil immersion when they move continuously.
Various thickening agents can be used. Glycerine Jelly tends to make the spores collapse. Methyl Cellulose (aka wallpaper paste) is often used for similar purposes. Xantham Gum (on the "Free From" shelf at the supermarket), Alginate or Gelatine could also be tried.
Both methyl cellulose and xanthan gum contain structures that show up under contrast enhancement techniques (eg Phase Contrast, Differential Interference Contrast): bamboo ropes for methyl cellulose and minute granules for xanthan gum. (Either of these may vary with the source of the material).
Xanthan Gum can be prepared by adding the powder to water at about 1:5. Stir until all the white trapped air has disappeared. It keeps for at least a few weeks, but seal to keep out dust and prevent evaporation. To use touch the surface with a glass rod (or finger tip!) and touch onto the slide. As the coverslip is pressed down it will form a thin film without too many air bubbles.
Unless otherwise expressly stated, all original material on the BioInfo website by Malcolm Storey is licensed under the above Creative Commons Licence.