Mosses of Manhattan

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We don't think of Manhattan, NYC, NY, USA as being a particularly "mossy" place, not like overgrown shady ravines in the upstate New York wilderness areas, but when you start paying attention, you discover that mosses are all around us almost everywhere here in the heart of the city: sidewalks, planters, waste ground, edges of paths , etc.

I know almost nothing about mosses, but I figure that my part of Manhattan must be home to only a limited number of moss species because of the air pollution and lack of fully wild habitat, despite Central Park's extensive "imitation wilderness". So I am guessing there might perhaps be 60 species in Manhattan. I suppose Inwood Park is the closest thing Manhattan has to real wilderness, as it is huge with varied habitat and there is some original forest there, but I have yet to make my way to Inwood. When things normalize I will head up there.

I am working with my iPhone, and the camera in the phone is not good at macro/micro pics because there is not enough resolution. However, I am certain there are a number of local mosses that I can learn to ID using the features that are visible to my naked eye, a hand lens, and the somewhat inadequate phone camera.

I already think that I know a small handful of my local moss species, some only to genus. But I could be wrong on some of them -- a little knowledge is dangerous in that way!

One local moss that I have been confident about for a couple of years is Silvery Bryum. I believe that anyone can learn to recognize that moss, even with one hand tied behind their backs.

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Here are a few of my few mosses so far:

Silvery Bryum – Bryum argenteum

Seductive Entodon Moss – Entodon seductrix – I may have wrongly ID'ed some of these.

Woody Thyme Moss – Plagiomnium cuspidatum

  • – or could this be another species in that genus?

Bristle Mosses, Orthotrichum, I am pretty sure the genus is OK but I am also guessing I may have in particular O. stellatum, the Starry Bristle Moss. That species ID may be incorrect, but whatever it is, I always find it growing in the crevices of the bark of mature Callery Pear street trees.

Wall Screw-Moss – Tortula muralis

Redshank – Ceratodon purpureus

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And with some ID help from a professional moss person, I may also have found:

Common Bladder Moss – Physcomitrium pyriforme

Bonfire Moss – Funaria hygrometrica

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The AI/Computer vision has recently started offering some guesses on moss IDs. There are many of them, most of which are probably way off, but here is one suggestion:

Bird's Claw Beard Moss – Barbula unguiculata

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Publicado el mayo 1, 2020 01:09 TARDE por susanhewitt susanhewitt

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Comentarios

When observing a moss, what should one look for?

Publicado por irag hace más de 4 años

Good question! It is probably better to ask me that when I know a lot more than I do now, but if the moss is fruiting, definitely photograph those parts well. Also pull out one strand and find out if it is branching or just one spike. Then also you need to look very closely at the leaf shape, which means having a hand lens at least.

Publicado por susanhewitt hace más de 4 años

Oh and one very important thing to know in advance is that many mosses look completely different when they are wet after rain, compared with how they look when they have dried out.

Publicado por susanhewitt hace más de 4 años

Those are good things to know. Thanks.

Publicado por irag hace más de 4 años

It seems that if you want to get serious about mosses you have to take a piece home, use a microscope, carefully pull it apart and put a leaf and part of the capsule under the microscope.

Publicado por susanhewitt hace más de 4 años

That's a good plan.

The Riverside Drive park wall has much moss growing on it.
I also have a terrarium here full of various mosses that I can experiment on .

I also have a microscope and I have access to BioBus stereoscopic microscopes with built in USB microscopes.

Publicado por irag hace más de 4 años

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