Monosolenium

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Monosolenium tenerum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Marchantiophyta
Class: Marchantiopsida
Order: Marchantiales
Family: Monosoleniaceae
Inoue[1]
Genus: Monosolenium
Griff.[2]
Species: M. tenerum
Binomial name
Monosolenium tenerum
Griff.[2]
Approximate distribution map of Monosolenium. Green indicates presence.
Approximate distribution map of Monosolenium. Green indicates presence.
Synonyms
  • Dumortieropsis liukiuensis Horikawa[3]

Monosolenium tenerum is a weedy species of liverwort found in east Asia.

Contents

[edit] Ecology

Monosolenium tenerum is a terrestrial plant, growing on moist, shady soil, sometimes in association with Marchantia palmata.[4] The species is able to exploit high levels of nitrogen in surface soil to achieve local dominance; it is therefore most common in areas inhabited by man, such as where fertilizers have been applied.[5] Occurrences in the wild are rare, but plants are not uncommon in populated areas. Schuster notes:

In Japan the incidence of this species has declined in the countryside in recent decades—after adoption of modern plumbing. When the old-fashioned privy was current, Monosolenium was a common "weed," as, e.g., around the privies in the periphery of the Mossy Temple at Kyoto...and in settled areas. The plant apparently hardly occurs "wild" and always seems associated with man—much like that other east Asiatic monotype, Ginkgo biloba. It is of interest that this plant, "lost" for decades, appeared on fertilized soil in a greenhouse in Munich, giving Goebel the opportunity to carefully investigate the taxon.[5]

Monosolenium has been red-listed as a vulnerable species in Japan,[6] and although it is extremely rare in India (where it is confined to altitudes between about 550 to 1000 m in the sub-Himalayas as a result of habitat destruction), it is common in other countries where it occurs.[4]

The species has an east Asiatic distribution. It has been found in east India (Assam, Himachal Pradesh, & Uttarakhand),[4] Nepal,[7] China (northwestern Sichuan,[8] Guangdong,[1] & Macau), Taiwan,[9] as well as the Ryukyu Islands, Japan, and Hawaii.[1] All areas where the plant grows are subtropical or temperate regions with mesic habitats, where there is ample supply of moisture. Perhaps it is because the species grows in such mesic climates that the thallus (plant body) has become simplified, since the chambered internal anatomy of other Marchantiales seems adapted to a climate with periodic drying and an unreliable water supply.[10]

[edit] Economic uses

Monosolenium has no economic uses. However, a plant sold as Monosolenium tenerum has been made popular as a freshwater aquarium plant by Tropica [11][12]. It was initially sold under the name Pellia or Pelia, and is now being sold as Monosolenium tenerum, but neither of these names is correct. The plants they sell are most likely a species of the Metzgeriaceae or Pallaviciniaceae.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Inoue, Hiroshi (1966). "Monosoleniaceae, a New Family Segregated from the Marchantiaceae". Bulletin of the National Science Museum, Tokyo 9 (2): 115–118, + 2 plates. 
  2. ^ a b Griffith, W. (1849) Icones Plantarum Asiaticarum, II, Notulae ad plantas Asiaticus, II., p. 341 (Calcutta).
  3. ^ Horikawa, Y. (1934). "Monographia Hepaticarum Australi-Japonicarum". Journal of Science of the Hiroshima University (ser. B, div. 2) 2: 117. 
  4. ^ a b c Singh, D. K.; Singh, S. K. (June 15, 2007). "Hide and seek of Monosolenium tenerum Griff. (Hepaticae: Monosoleniaceae) in Indian bryoflora" (PDF). Current Science 92 (11): 1483–1485. 
  5. ^ a b Schuster, Rudolf M. (1992). The Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of North America, volume VI, Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History, pp. 19-20, 300, 302-303. ISBN 0-914-86821-7. 
  6. ^ Red List of Threatened Mosses and Hepatics of Japan (CSV).
  7. ^ Pradhan, Nirmala; David G. Long & Sanu Devi Joshi (2007). "Monosolenium tenerum Griff. (Marchantiopsida, Monosoleniaceae) in Nepal". Cryptogamie Bryologie 28 (3): 243–248. 
  8. ^ Piippo, Sinikka; Xiao-Lan He & Timo Koponen (1997). "Hepatics from northwestern Sichuan, China, with a checklist of Sichuan hepatics" (PDF). Annales Botanici Fennici 34: 51–63. ISSN 0003-3847. 
  9. ^ Shan-Hsiung Lin (1981). "Exsiccatae of the Bryophytes of Taiwan" (fee required). The Bryologist 84 (3): 359–362. doi:10.2307/3242851. 
  10. ^ Schuster, Rudolf M. (1992). The Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of North America, volume V, Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History, pp. 768 & 773. ISBN 0-914-86820-9. 
  11. ^ Monosolenium tenerum (erroneously “Pellia”). Tropica Aquarium Plants. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
  12. ^ Monosolenium tenerum (Pellia). The Teh. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.

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