Field Guide

Mosses, Liverworts, and Lichens

Showing 1 - 9 of 9 results
Media
Carolina phaeoceros hornwort, Phaeoceros carolinianus
Species Types
Scientific Name
4 species in Missouri
Description
With their flattened, green forms, hornworts resemble liverworts, but their spore-bearing structures are elongated and horn-shaped. As with liverworts and mosses, hornworts make forest floors, streamsides, and spring openings beautiful.
Media
Closeup of thallus lobe of snakeskin liverwort
Species Types
Scientific Name
About 112 species in Missouri
Description
Liverworts, along with mosses, make forest floors, streamsides, and spring openings beautiful. They’re fascinating but overlooked.
Media
Snakeskin liverwort growing on a rock
Species Types
Scientific Name
Conocephalum salebrosum (formerly C. conicum)
Description
Snakeskin liverwort looks like large, flattened, irregular, overlapping straps. The surface is covered with polygon-shaped air pores, giving it a bubbly appearance similar to snakeskin. Look for it along streams, springs, and the moist bases of bluffs.
Media
Colony of umbrella liverwort with maturing archegonia
Species Types
Scientific Name
Marchantia polymorpha
Description
Umbrella liverwort is the most famous liverwort in the world. It grows in green ribbons and is very common on the soil of potted plants. It typically forms cuplike gemmae on its upper surface. Its palm-tree-shaped archegona are distinctive, too.
Media
Floating crystalwort, Riccia fluitans, in an aquarium
Species Types
Scientific Name
Riccia fluitans
Description
Floating crystalwort, or slender riccia, is a type of liverwort that floats in lakes, ponds, and streams, forming dense, tangled mats in shallow water. It’s also used as an aquarium plant.
Media
Wall scalewort, Porella species, growing on sandstone at Painted Rock CA
Species Types
Scientific Name
Porella spp.
Description
Porella liverworts are fairly common in Missouri, but few people recognize them when they see one. These scaleworts are some of our many species of leafy liverworts — small, mosslike plants that form traceries on rocks or trees.
Media
Climacium moss, or tree moss, closeup showing treelike growth form
Species Types
Scientific Name
Climacium americanum and Climacium kindbergii
Description
Tree mosses in genus Climacium look like miniature trees, complete with tiny upright trunks and long, slender branches clustered at the top. They form dense, thick mats in moist, shady places.
Media
Closeup of slender starburst moss, Atrichium angustatum, showing leaf configuration and form
Species Types
Scientific Name
Atrichum spp.
Description
Missouri has five species of starburst mosses (genus Atrichum). They tend to look different depending on whether they are wet or dry. When wet, they look like mass of bright green stars, but when dry, the leaves shrivel, contort, and look dead.
Media
Mosses growing at Runge Nature Center
Species Types
Scientific Name
Approximately 315 species and varieties in Missouri
Description
Mosses are small, low plants that form cushions or carpets, usually in damp places. They lack veinlike structures and do not produce flowers or seeds. They release spores from tiny capsules that usually arise on thin stalks.
See Also

About Mosses, Liverworts, and Lichens in Missouri

Mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and lichens seem rather similar, but these organisms are in very different groups. Mosses, liverworts, and hornworts are small, low plants usually found in damp habitats. Unlike more familiar plants, they lack veinlike structures and do not produce flowers or seeds — instead, they produce spores. Meanwhile, lichens are not plants at all: they are a collection of different fungi that have photosynthetic algae living within their tissues.