Classification
 Nomenclature
Scientific Name:
Weymouthia mollis (Hedw.) Broth., Nat. Pflanzenfam. [Engler & Prantl] 1(3), 812 (1906)
Synonymy:
  • Leskea mollis Hedw., Sp. Musc. Frond. 234 (1801)
  • Meteorium molle (Hedw.) Hook.f. & Wilson in Wilson, Bot. Antarct. Voy. II (Fl. Nov.-Zel.) Part II, 100 (1854)
  • Isothecium molle (Hedw.) Mitt., Hooker's J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 8: 263 (1856)
  • Stereodon mollis (Hedw.) Mitt. in Mitten, J. Proc. Linn. Soc., Bot. 4: 88 (1859) nom. illeg.
  • Pilotrichella mollis (Hedw.) A.Jaeger, Ber. Thätigk. St. Gallischen Naturwiss. Ges. 1875–1876: 260 (1877)
Lectotype: N.Z., St. Crypt. IV. P. 103. T 40, G-Hedwig, G00040342. (Lectotype designated by Tangney 2010, p. 147.)
 Description

Plants slender, light to dark olive-green, slightly glossy, forming extensive loosely attached masses on shrubs and trees. Stems pendent or sometimes creeping, loosely complanate, attenuate, not stipitate; in cross-section ± round, 230 × 190–210 µm, with an outer layer of 4–5 cells surrounding a core of parenchyma and an indistinct central strand. Branches wider than stems, cuspidate, sometimes attenuate. Pseudoparaphyllia c. 200 × 125 µm. Stem leaves erect, imbricate, inflated-smooth when moist, loosely wrinkled when dry, oblong, obtuse to widely acute, erect at the apex, denticulate above and occasionally to the lower margins, 1.5–1.7 (–1.8) × 0.6–0.7 mm, with alar cells thick-walled and irregularly porose, forming a dark excavate group 5–6 cells wide and extending 5–6 cells from the leaf base. Branch leaves shorter, erect-spreading, with a smaller alar group, 1.2–1.5 × 0.6–0.7 mm. Mid laminal cells of branch leaves linear, ± sinuous, firm-walled, prorate, not porose, 40–50 (–60) × 2.4–3.2 µm; becoming somewhat shorter, wider and porose towards the base, (24–) 36–55 × 3.2.–4.8 (–6.4) µm, at the apex rhombic, 5–12 (–28) × 3.6–4.8 µm.

Dioicous or pseudautoicous. Setae short, to c. 3.5 mm, not twisted. Capsules oblong, (0.9–) 1.0–1.2 × 0.6–0.7 mm; exothecial cells irregularly rectangular to hexagonal or ± isodiametric, 30–38 (–50) × (14–) 26–30 µm. Operculum rostrate, 0.5–0.9 mm. Exostome teeth 325–35 µm long; endostome with a basal membrane c. ⅕ of the height of the exostome. Calyptra c. 2 mm. Spores 28–33 µm.

 Recognition

Weymouthia mollis is a comparatively slender plant that is always pendent and lacks a weft-forming habit.  It differs from W. cochlearifolia in a number of features, principally in growth form and cell structure, and it is the only member of the N.Z. Lembophyllaceae which consistently produces pendent fronds. The other species, W. cochlearifolia, is mostly weft-forming, but does frequently produce pendent fronds. The mid laminal cells of W. mollis are non-porose, contrasting with the cells of W. cochlearifolia which are strongly porose. Sporophytically, the two taxa differ in several respects. The operculum of W. cochlearifolia is variable, apiculate to rostrate, compared to the rostrate operculum of W. mollis, and the endostome of W. mollis is reduced.  The calyptra of W. mollis may rarely be sparsely hairy, a feature absent in the other species.

As noted above, the pendulous forms of Weymouthia mollis are similar to species of Papillaria which differ in a range of features including plant colour, leaf plication and costae, a lack of alar cells and papillose cells.

 Distribution

NI: N Auckland, including offshore islands (PK, HC, LB, GB), S Auckland, Gisborne, Hawke’s Bay, Taranaki (Taranaki Maunga), Wellington; SI: Nelson, Marlborough, Canterbury, Westland, Otago, Southland; Ch.

Austral. Tasmania*, mainland Australia (Vic.*); Tahiti*; Chile*.

 Habitat

Weymouthia mollis typically forms pendent masses on twigs and small branches in humid forest habitats, particularly over streams and river margins. It also occurs on damp logs and rocks. It mainly occurs in forest, particularly upper elevation forest, and also grows in more open and shaded shrubland. It occurs close to sea-level at Riccarton Bush, Christchurch, but mostly from 60 m to 800 m across much of its range. It is known up to 1100 m in Abel Tasman National Park on South I., and to 1200 m on North I. (Pihanga,Taupo).

 Biostatus
Indigenous (Non-endemic)
 Bibliography
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. 1927: Studies in the bryology of New Zealand, with special reference to the herbarium of Robert Brown. Part V. Bulletin, New Zealand Institute 3(5): 239–298.
Hedwig, J. 1801: Species Muscorum Frondosorum descriptae et tabulis aeneis lxxvii coloratis illustratae. Barth, Leipzig.
Jaeger, A. 1877: Genera et species muscorum systematice disposita seu adumbratio florae muscorum totius orbis terrarum (continuatio) [Pars VII]. Bericht über die Thätigkeit der St. Gallischen Naturwissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft 1875–1876: 201–371. [More commonly available as the “Separatabdruck” of the same title: 1870–1879: 2 vols.]
Mitten, W. 1856: A list of the Musci and Hepaticae collected in Victoria, Australia, by Dr. F. Mueller. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 8: 257–266.
Mitten, W. 1859 ("1860"): Description of some new species of Musci from New Zealand and other parts of the southern hemisphere, together with an enumeration of the species collected in Tasmania by William Archer Esq.; arranged upon the plan proposed in the "Musci Indiae Orientalis". Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society. Botany 4: 64–100.
Tangney, R.S. 2010: Lectotypification of Leskea mollis Hedw. Journal of Bryology 32: 147–149.
Tangney, R.S. 2026: Lembophyllaceae. In: Glenny, D. (ed.) Flora of New Zealand — Mosses. Fascicle 51. Manaaki Whenua Press, Lincoln.
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.