Nomenclature
Scientific Name:
Triquetrella papillata (Hook.f. & Wilson) Broth., Nat. Pflanzenfam. [Engler & Prantl] 1(3), 399 (1902)
Synonymy:
  • Didymodon papillatus Hook.f. & Wilson, London J. Bot. 3: 544 (1844)
Type: Tasmania, J.D. Hooker, BM-Hooker 000845908!
  • = Triquetrella filiformis Müll.Hal., Österr. Bot. Z. 47: 422 (1897)
Type: Australia, Adelaide, Nyholm, BM 000845916!
Etymology:
The epithet refers to the highly papillose laminal cells.
 Description

Plants yellow-green above, brown below, forming often extensive interwoven mats of terete shoots on soil or rock. Stems red, bearing sparse, smooth brown rhizoids, in cross-section round-triangular, with central strand absent or small, sclerodermis present. Leaves in 3 distinct ranks that spiral around the stem, widely spreading from a ± sheathing base when moist, erect and closely appressed with occasional apices diverging when dry, 1.0–1.5 mm, ovate-triangular, carinate, acute to acuminate, strongly decurrent; margins variably recurved, crenulate from bulging cells and papillose; upper laminal cells obscure, round-rhombic, thick-walled, thicker in corners, (7.5–)9.0–13.5(–15) × 7.5–9.0(–13.5) µm, papillose with 1 or 2 high, spinose or bifid papillae; marginal cells not differentiated; lower laminal cells elongate in a small group adjacent to the costa. Costa concolorous, failing below the apex or percurrent. Laminal KOH colour reaction yellow.

Dioicous? Perichaetia terminal and lateral, perichaetial leaves enlarged and conspicuously sheathing the setae, abruptly narrowed to a reflexed, acuminate apex, with laminal cells weakly papillose. Perigonia (from Tasmanian material) in clusters at shoot apex, with bracts obtuse to acuminate. Setae very slender, flexuose, 12–16 mm. Capsules slightly asymmetric, long-cylindric, c. 1.5 mm. Operculum bluntly rostrate with a curved beak, c. ⅓ the theca length. Peristome with straight teeth, c. 180 µm, obscurely and obliquely striolate. Spores 13–17 µm, weakly papillose.

 Recognition

The terete, filiform shoots with their leaves appressed when dry (but with occasional leaf tips diverging), and with red stems visible when moist, are characteristic of the species. Pseudoleskea imbricata also has appressed leaves when dry, but in that species the shoots are very smooth and julaceous. Leptodontium interruptum is superficially similar, may be found in similar habitats to T. papillata, and is often growing intermixed; the dry shoots of L. interruptum have leaf apices spreading. In addition, its leaf margins are undulate, and toothed near the apex (vs not undulate and without teeth in T. papillata).

 Distribution

NI: N Auckland, including offshore islands (HC, GB, RT), S Auckland, Gisborne, Hawke’s Bay, Taranaki, Wellington (incl. KA); SI: Nelson, Marlborough, Canterbury, Otago, Southland; St; Ch.

Australasian. Tasmania*, mainland Australia*.

 Habitat

In exposed sites, often in grassland or on sandy soil near sea beaches. This is a common species, but one that is only very rarely found fruiting. Plants with mature sporophytes and young perigonia were collected in Kowhai Grove, Rangitoto Island, on "bare ground in a canopy gap" in 1982 (AK 332724). In time the gap closed over, and by 2005 no Triquetrella papillata could be found at the now more shaded site. Commonly associated mosses are Ceratodon purpureus, Gertrudiella torquata, Hypnum cupressiforme, Leptodontium interruptum, Rosulabryum campylothecium, and Thuidiopsis furfurosa.

Records range in elevation from near sea-level to 760 m (Herbert, Otago L.D.).

 Biostatus
Indigenous (Non-endemic)
 Notes

Examination of putative type material of T. filiformis (Nyholm, BM 000845916), and of N.Z. specimens in NY-Mitten that were cited by Dixon (1923 p. 121), confirms the conclusion of Sainsbury (1948​​​​​​​, 1955) that this species does not warrant distinction from T. papillata.

 Bibliography
Beever, J.E. 2024: Pottiaceae subfamily Barbuloideae. In: Heenan, P.B. (ed.) Flora of New Zealand — Mosses. Fascicle 50. Manaaki Whenua Press, Lincoln.
Beever, J.E.; Allison, K.W.; Child, J. 1992: The Mosses of New Zealand. Edition 2. University of Otago Press, Dunedin.
Beever, J.E.; Fife, A.J.; Jiménez, J.A. 2023: Taxonomic notes on the New Zealand moss flora: a new combination and a new species in the genus Tridontium (Pottiaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany 61(1): 67–73. (Published online: 17 Mar 2022)
Brotherus, V.F. 1901–1909: Musci (Laubmoose) II Specieller Teil. In: Engler, A.; Prantl, K. (ed.) Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien. Teil 1. Abt. 3. Engelmann, Leipzig. 277–1246.
Dixon, H.N. 1923: Studies in the bryology of New Zealand, with special reference to the herbarium of Robert Brown. Part III. Bulletin, New Zealand Institute 3(3): 75–152.
Hooker, J.D.; Wilson, W. 1844: Musci Antarctici; being characters with brief descriptions of the new species of mosses discovered during the voyage of H.M. Discovery ships, Erebus and Terror, in the southern circumpolar regions, together with those of Tasmania and New Zealand. London Journal of Botany 3: 533–556. [Oct. 1844]
Malcolm, B.; Malcolm, N.; Shevock, J. 2020: New Zealand Mosses – an illustrated key. Version xii. 2020. https://www.nzpcn.org.nz/site/assets/files/0/65/684/nz_moss_key_2020-compressed.pdf
Müller, C. 1897: Triquetrella genus muscorum novum coditum et descriptum. Österreichische Botanische Zeitschrift 47: 420–424.
Sainsbury, G.O.K. 1948: Synonyms of some New Zealand mosses. Revue Bryologique et Lichénologique, n.s. 17: 79–85.
Sainsbury, G.O.K. 1955: A handbook of the New Zealand mosses. Bulletin of the Royal Society of New Zealand 5: 1–490.
Scott, G.A.M.; Stone, I.G. 1976: The Mosses of Southern Australia. Academic Press, London.
Wilson, W. 1854 ("1855"): Musci. In: Hooker, J.D. The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage of H.M. Discovery Ships Erebus and Terror, in the years 1839–1843, under the command of Captain Sir James Clark Ross. II. Flora Novae-Zelandiae. Part II. Flowerless plants. Lovell Reeve, London. 57–125.
Zander, R.H. 1993: Genera of the Pottiaceae: mosses of harsh environments. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences 32: i–vi, 1–378.