Moss

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Botanical Characteristics:

  • Mosses are non-vascular plants in the division Bryophyta.
  • They are small, herbaceous plants that absorb water and nutrients through their leaves.
  • Mosses lack water-bearing xylem tracheids or vessels, distinguishing them from vascular plants.
  • The dominant phase of the moss life cycle is the haploid gametophyte generation.
  • Mosses reproduce using spores, not seeds, and do not have flowers.
  • Mosses have threadlike rhizoids that anchor them to their substrate.
  • Mosses have only a single set of chromosomes, making them haploid.

Commercial and Ecological Significance:

  • Mosses are the main constituent of peat, mostly the genus Sphagnum.
  • Used for decorative purposes in gardens and the florist trade.
  • Traditionally used for insulation and liquid absorption.
  • Important for habitat restoration and reforestation.
  • Approximately 12,000 moss species worldwide.
  • Moss habitat varies from cool coastal forests to basalt flows.
  • Shade tolerance and substrate preferences vary by species.
  • Mosses require liquid water for fertilization and can survive desiccation.
  • Relationship with cyanobacteria benefits ecosystem health.

Reproductive Mechanisms:

  • Dioicous mosses have separate male and female sex organs on different plants.
  • Monoicous mosses have both sex organs on the same plant.
  • Sperm in mosses are biflagellate and require water for fertilization.
  • Some moss species use splash cups to increase fertilization distance.
  • Mosses rely on wind or specialized mechanisms for spore dispersal.
  • Microarthropods aid in moss fertilization.
  • Mosses emit scents to attract pollinators for fertilization.
  • Gemmae on mosses allow for asexual reproduction without fertilization.

DNA Repair and Classification:

  • Moss species like Physcomitrella patens are used to study DNA repair mechanisms.
  • Homologous recombination is essential for repairing DNA in mosses.
  • DNA damage repair is crucial for normal plant functions and fertility.
  • Mosses are classified under the division Bryophyta with liverworts and hornworts.
  • Mosses and liverworts belong to a clade called Setaphyta.
  • Various moss classes like Sphagnopsida and Polytrichopsida have distinct characteristics and diversity.

Cultivation and Uses:

  • Moss considered a weed in grass lawns but valued in Japanese gardening.
  • Moss collections often transplanted from the wild.
  • Moss can be grown from spores using porous and moisture-retentive materials.
  • Moss used in bonsai for enhancing age impression.
  • Mosses in green roofs offer advantages like reduced weight loads and high drought tolerance.
  • Mosses are also utilized on green walls.
  • Mosses have historical uses in insulation, bedding, and wound dressing.
  • Commercially, intact moss is used in the florist trade and home decoration.

Moss Data Sources

Reference URL
Glossary https:/glossary/moss
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moss
Wikidata https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q25347
Knowledge Graph https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/0184yy
DBPedia http://dbpedia.org/resource/Moss
Product Ontology http://www.productontology.org/id/Moss