Riccia atlantica

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Riccia atlantica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Marchantiophyta
Class: Marchantiopsida
Order: Marchantiales
Family: Ricciaceae
Genus: Riccia
Species:
R. atlantica
Binomial name
Riccia atlantica
Sérgio & Perold

Riccia atlantica is a rare species of liverwort in the family Ricciaceae. It is endemic to the Madeira archipelago and the Savage Islands in Portugal. Its natural habitat is rocky shores.

Riccia atlantica was first scientifically described in 1992 by Cécilia Loff Pereira Sérgio Costa Gomes and Sarie Magdalena Perold. The type specimen (holotype: LISU; isotype: MADJ) was collected at Ponta de S. Lourenço, Nossa Senhora de Piedade, Madeira, at an elevation of 50–60 m. The species is classified within subgenus Riccia, section Riccia.[2]

Description

Riccia atlantica is a small, annual liverwort that forms rosettes up to 10 mm wide. When fresh, the plant appears pale green with a distinctive shiny, crystalline surface texture due to its specialised surface (epithelial) cells. These cells are distinctly large, globe-shaped, and arranged in one or two layers.[2]

The individual branches of the plant are 3–6 mm long, 0.5–1.0 mm wide, and 0.3–0.5 mm thick. They fork once or twice symmetrically to form a Y-shape. In cross-section, each branch is flat on the bottom and rounded on top, being about 2 to 2.5 times wider than thick. The edges are rounded and blunt. When dry, the plant's edges curl slightly inward.[2]

The reproductive structures are separated by gender (dioicous), with male and female organs occurring on different plants. The male structures (antheridia) appear in groups of 4–6 along the plant's midline, with their necks projecting about 450 micrometres. Each branch typically contains 2–3 spore-producing capsules (sporangia). The spores are triangular-globular in shape, measuring 70–80 micrometres in diameter, and have a distinctive pattern of hexagonal compartments on their surface.[2]

The species is distinguished from its relatives by several features: its lack of protective hairs (cilia), its very small, transparent scales on the underside that do not reach the plant's edges, and its unique spore ornamentation pattern.[2]

Habitat and distribution

Conservation

References

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