Fulfordianthus evansii
Fulfordianthus evansii is a species of liverwort in the family Lejeuneaceae. It is found in Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and Panama. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.
Taxonomy
The species was first described as Thysananthus evansii by Margaret Fulford in 1941, publishing the description in the Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. In 1992, Stephan Robbert Gradstein transferred it to the genus Fulfordianthus, creating its current accepted binomial name. In the same year, Schuster attempted to move the species to Thysanopsis, but this combination was not validly published. The type specimen was collected in Punta Gorda, Belize, though the collector's identity is unknown. This holotype is housed in the herbarium of the Cincinnati Museum Center.Description
Fulfordianthus evansii is a small liverwort with irregularly branching stems that grow up to long and wide. Female plants show a distinctive forking pattern when reproductive structures are present. The stem's surface is composed of 60–90 rows of cells.The leaves have two distinct parts: a larger upper lobe and a smaller lower lobule. The upper lobe is oblong in shape, about 1 mm long and 0.5–0.6 mm wide. Its edges show tiny tooth-like projections formed by protruding cells, particularly in the upper half. Under magnification, the leaf cells appear square to hexagonal in the middle of the leaf, becoming more elongated near the base. Unlike many related species, this liverwort lacks oil bodies within its cells.
The lower leaf lobules are very small and feature a distinctive long, curved tooth made up of up to 10 cells. The underleaves, which are leaf-like structures on the plant's underside, overlap loosely and spread outward, measuring about 0.5–0.6 mm long and slightly wider than long, with small teeth along their upper edges.
The male and female reproductive structures follow the typical pattern for the genus. The protective leaves around the female reproductive structures are oblong with irregular teeth along their upper edges. The perianth is typical for the genus, featuring a small beak-like projection 3–10 cells long. The spore-producing structure has not been observed in this species.