Field Guide

Mosses, Liverworts, and Lichens

Showing 41 - 43 of 43 results
Media
Silver Beard Moss, or grimmia dry rock moss, Grimmia laevigata
Species Types
Scientific Name
Grimmia laevigata
Description
Silver beard moss grows on dry, exposed rocks and has a coarse texture. Each grayish-green leaf has a long, white, hairlike, slightly curved extension at the tip, giving this moss a silvery cast like a mink coat.
Media
Baby tooth moss, or woodsy thyme-moss, Plagiomnium cuspidatum
Species Types
Scientific Name
Plagiomnium spp. (formerly Mnium spp.)
Description
Common and easy to recognize, tooth mosses in genus Plagiomnium have several common names. Identify them by their large, oval, transparent, light green, finely toothed leaves that grow on only two sides of the stalk.
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.