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Campylopus fragilis (Brid.) Bruch & Schimp.Family: DicranalesEN: Brittle Swan-neck Moss, DE: Zerbrechliches KrummstielmoosSlo.: krhki labodovratecDat.: March 19. 2022Lat.: 46.36000 Long.: 13.69950Code: Bot_1444/2022_DSC6435Habitat: small former pasture, now partly overgrown with bushes (Corylus avellana dominant) and scattered small trees (Fraxinus ornus, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies); calcareous ground; slightly inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; warm, half sunny, dry place; exposed to direct rain, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevations 635 m (2.080 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: shallow sandy soil.Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soa; between villages Soa and Trenta; near Soa 48 abandoned cottage, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC. Comments (pertain to pictures in Flicker album Campylopus fragilis): Campylopus fragilis is a wide spread species (Europe, Africa, Asia) yet nowhere a common moss. In Slovenia it is a rare species. It usually appears in small patches not much greater than a few square decimeters. Such is also the case in this observation. Its 'specialty' are deciduous leaves. They are almost white when they fall off. Many times they appear abundantly and make the species easy to recognize. Ref.:(1) Personal communication (conf.) with doc.dr. Simona Strgulc Krajek, Biotechnical Faculty - University of Ljubljana, Department of biology.(2) Ian Atherton, Ed., Mosses and Liverworts of Britain and Ireland - a field guide, British Bryological Society (2010), p 255. (3) M. Lth, Mosses of Europe A Photographic Flora, Michael Lth, Vol. 2., 2019, pp 483.(4) M. Nebel, G. Philippi, eds., Die Mosse Baden-Wurttembergs, Band 1., (2000), Ulmer, p 167.
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Campylopus fragilis (Brid.) Bruch & Schimp.Family: DicranalesEN: Brittle Swan-neck Moss, DE: Zerbrechliches KrummstielmoosSlo.: krhki labodovratecDat.: March 19. 2022Lat.: 46.36000 Long.: 13.69950Code: Bot_1444/2022_DSC6435Habitat: small former pasture, now partly overgrown with bushes (Corylus avellana dominant) and scattered small trees (Fraxinus ornus, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies); calcareous ground; slightly inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; warm, half sunny, dry place; exposed to direct rain, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevations 635 m (2.080 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: shallow sandy soil.Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soa; between villages Soa and Trenta; near Soa 48 abandoned cottage, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC. Comments (pertain to pictures in Flicker album Campylopus fragilis): Campylopus fragilis is a wide spread species (Europe, Africa, Asia) yet nowhere a common moss. In Slovenia it is a rare species. It usually appears in small patches not much greater than a few square decimeters. Such is also the case in this observation. Its 'specialty' are deciduous leaves. They are almost white when they fall off. Many times they appear abundantly and make the species easy to recognize. Ref.:(1) Personal communication (conf.) with doc.dr. Simona Strgulc Krajek, Biotechnical Faculty - University of Ljubljana, Department of biology.(2) Ian Atherton, Ed., Mosses and Liverworts of Britain and Ireland - a field guide, British Bryological Society (2010), p 255. (3) M. Lth, Mosses of Europe A Photographic Flora, Michael Lth, Vol. 2., 2019, pp 483.(4) M. Nebel, G. Philippi, eds., Die Mosse Baden-Wurttembergs, Band 1., (2000), Ulmer, p 167.
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Campylopus fragilis (Brid.) Bruch & Schimp.Family: DicranalesEN: Brittle Swan-neck Moss, DE: Zerbrechliches KrummstielmoosSlo.: krhki labodovratecDat.: March 19. 2022Lat.: 46.36000 Long.: 13.69950Code: Bot_1444/2022_DSC6435Habitat: small former pasture, now partly overgrown with bushes (Corylus avellana dominant) and scattered small trees (Fraxinus ornus, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies); calcareous ground; slightly inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; warm, half sunny, dry place; exposed to direct rain, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevations 635 m (2.080 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: shallow sandy soil.Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soa; between villages Soa and Trenta; near Soa 48 abandoned cottage, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC. Comments (pertain to pictures in Flicker album Campylopus fragilis): Campylopus fragilis is a wide spread species (Europe, Africa, Asia) yet nowhere a common moss. In Slovenia it is a rare species. It usually appears in small patches not much greater than a few square decimeters. Such is also the case in this observation. Its 'specialty' are deciduous leaves. They are almost white when they fall off. Many times they appear abundantly and make the species easy to recognize. Ref.:(1) Personal communication (conf.) with doc.dr. Simona Strgulc Krajek, Biotechnical Faculty - University of Ljubljana, Department of biology.(2) Ian Atherton, Ed., Mosses and Liverworts of Britain and Ireland - a field guide, British Bryological Society (2010), p 255. (3) M. Lth, Mosses of Europe A Photographic Flora, Michael Lth, Vol. 2., 2019, pp 483.(4) M. Nebel, G. Philippi, eds., Die Mosse Baden-Wurttembergs, Band 1., (2000), Ulmer, p 167.
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Campylopus fragilis (Brid.) Bruch & Schimp.Family: DicranalesEN: Brittle Swan-neck Moss, DE: Zerbrechliches KrummstielmoosSlo.: krhki labodovratecDat.: March 19. 2022Lat.: 46.36000 Long.: 13.69950Code: Bot_1444/2022_DSC6435Habitat: small former pasture, now partly overgrown with bushes (Corylus avellana dominant) and scattered small trees (Fraxinus ornus, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies); calcareous ground; slightly inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; warm, half sunny, dry place; exposed to direct rain, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevations 635 m (2.080 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: shallow sandy soil.Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soa; between villages Soa and Trenta; near Soa 48 abandoned cottage, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC. Comments (pertain to pictures in Flicker album Campylopus fragilis): Campylopus fragilis is a wide spread species (Europe, Africa, Asia) yet nowhere a common moss. In Slovenia it is a rare species. It usually appears in small patches not much greater than a few square decimeters. Such is also the case in this observation. Its 'specialty' are deciduous leaves. They are almost white when they fall off. Many times they appear abundantly and make the species easy to recognize. Ref.:(1) Personal communication (conf.) with doc.dr. Simona Strgulc Krajek, Biotechnical Faculty - University of Ljubljana, Department of biology.(2) Ian Atherton, Ed., Mosses and Liverworts of Britain and Ireland - a field guide, British Bryological Society (2010), p 255. (3) M. Lth, Mosses of Europe A Photographic Flora, Michael Lth, Vol. 2., 2019, pp 483.(4) M. Nebel, G. Philippi, eds., Die Mosse Baden-Wurttembergs, Band 1., (2000), Ulmer, p 167.
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Campylopus fragilis (Brid.) Bruch & Schimp.Family: DicranalesEN: Brittle Swan-neck Moss, DE: Zerbrechliches KrummstielmoosSlo.: krhki labodovratecDat.: March 19. 2022Lat.: 46.36000 Long.: 13.69950Code: Bot_1444/2022_DSC6435Habitat: small former pasture, now partly overgrown with bushes (Corylus avellana dominant) and scattered small trees (Fraxinus ornus, Ostrya carpinifolia, Picea abies); calcareous ground; slightly inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; warm, half sunny, dry place; exposed to direct rain, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevations 635 m (2.080 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: shallow sandy soil.Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soa; between villages Soa and Trenta; near Soa 48 abandoned cottage, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC. Comments (pertain to pictures in Flicker album Campylopus fragilis): Campylopus fragilis is a wide spread species (Europe, Africa, Asia) yet nowhere a common moss. In Slovenia it is a rare species. It usually appears in small patches not much greater than a few square decimeters. Such is also the case in this observation. Its 'specialty' are deciduous leaves. They are almost white when they fall off. Many times they appear abundantly and make the species easy to recognize. Ref.:(1) Personal communication (conf.) with doc.dr. Simona Strgulc Krajek, Biotechnical Faculty - University of Ljubljana, Department of biology.(2) Ian Atherton, Ed., Mosses and Liverworts of Britain and Ireland - a field guide, British Bryological Society (2010), p 255. (3) M. Lth, Mosses of Europe A Photographic Flora, Michael Lth, Vol. 2., 2019, pp 483.(4) M. Nebel, G. Philippi, eds., Die Mosse Baden-Wurttembergs, Band 1., (2000), Ulmer, p 167.
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My first stack produced using EL-Omegar 75mm lensBy the way, specimen is more than one year old dry shoot. collected in March 2014. It makes me thinking, that sealing moss shoots in polyester resin with prior vacuum dehydration and displacement of air in dry cells with inert gas (argon) can save it virtually forever.Sharpness here is a kind of bad, because by mistake I left the f/3.5 instead of setting it to f/5.6-f/8.0
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Tasmania, Australia
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Tasmania, Australia
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San Demetrio ne' Vestini, Abruzzi, Italy
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Briantspuddle, England, United Kingdom
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San Demetrio ne' Vestini, Abruzzi, Italy
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Bere Regis, England, United Kingdom
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Oregon City, Oregon, United States
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San Demetrio ne' Vestini, Abruzzi, Italy
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On damp rock at Anderson Springs, Lake County, California, March 25th 2002. Scanned slide 038-007. This is very similar to scanned slide 038-004, posted on Dec. 10th 2011, but has a slightly different colour balance.
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Dalrymple Creek, Queensland, Australia
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Dalrymple Creek, Queensland, Australia
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Dalrymple Creek, Queensland, Australia
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Zeeland, Netherlands
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Zeeland, Netherlands
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Tasmania, Australia
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Tall Timbers Research Station, Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, USA. On decorticated log.
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Christmas, Florida, United States
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Spring Hammock Trailer Park, Florida, United States