Selaginella apoda (L.) C. Morren
Family: Selaginellaceae
Meadow Spike-Moss,  more...
[Lycopodioides apoda (L.) Kuntze,  more...]
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Plants terrestrial, forming loose or clustered mats. Stems prostrate to short-creeping, sparsely branched, branches mostly simple or 1-forked, flat, not articulate, glabrous. Rhizophores axillary, throughout stem length or restricted to proximal 1/3 of stem, 0.05--0.1 mm diam. Leaves delicate, papery. Lateral leaves distant, green, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 1.35--2.25 X 0.75--1.35 mm; base slightly cordate; margins green or with 1 row of transparent cells, serrate; apex acute, ending in teeth. Median leaves ovate-lanceolate, 1--1.6 X 0.45--0.7 mm; base oblique on inner side, rounded and prominent on outer side; margins green or with row of transparent cells, serrate; apex straight, acuminate to long-acuminate. Strobili paired or solitary, lax, flattened, 1--2 cm; sporophylls ovate to ovate-deltate, strongly keeled, keel dentate, base slightly cordate to rounded, margins with scattered teeth, apex acuminate; megasporophylls larger and wider than microsporophylls, usually on underside of strobili.

Swamps, meadows, marshes, pastures, damp lawns, open woods, and stream banks, in basic to acidic soil; 0--100 m; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., Fla., Ga., Ill., Ind., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Miss., Mo., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Tex., Vt., Va., W.Va.; Mexico in Chihuahua, s to Chiapas.

Selaginella apoda is the central component of a taxonomically difficult species complex of eastern North America. It is closely related to S . eclipes (see discussion) and S . ludoviciana . Naturally occurring and experimental hybrids between S . apoda and S . ludoviciana have been reported (P. Somers and W. R. Buck 1975; T. R. Webster 1990). Also, some evidence indicates that hybrids may occur between S . apoda and S . eclipes . More studies are needed in this complex.

The species in the S . apoda complex may be best classified under subg. Homostachys of J. G. Baker (1883, 1887), with which they share flattened strobili and larger sporophylls (megasporophylls) that are usually in the same plane as the vegetative lateral leaves. They are, however, treated here with the other heterophyllous species of subg. Stachygynandrum until a reassessment of the classification of the genus Selaginella can be made.

From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

Occasionally throughout the lake area, becoming infrequent to local in the southern part of the state. It is, no doubt, more frequent than our map indicates. It prefers moist, grassy places and in the lake area it is usually in calcareous, sandy soil. In Dubois County I found it in a low woods in a hard, white clay soil with sweet gum.

Plants delicate, the stems 0.2-0.4 mm thick, branched, ±prostrate with assurgent tips; lvs thin, 4-ranked, the lateral ones spreading, ovate, 1-2 נ0.7-1 mm, acute, obscurely ciliolate-dentate, the dorsal and ventral ones appressed, to 1 נ0.6 mm, acute to long- acuminate; cones 1-2 cm, the sporophylls 4-ranked, slightly larger than the marginal lvs; megaspores white, 0.3-0.5 mm wide, the outer face reticulate; 2n=18. Meadows and streambanks, esp. in calcareous soil; s. Que. to Wis., s. to Fla. and Tex. (S. eclipes)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

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