Lycopodium clavatum
Common name:
Running clubmoss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Lycopodium annotinum
Common name:
Stiff club moss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Lycopodium clavatum
Common name:
Running clubmoss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Lycopodium annotinum
Common name:
Stiff club moss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Lycopodium clavatum
Common name:
Running clubmoss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Lycopodium annotinum
Common name:
Stiff club moss
Genus:
Lycopodium
Family:
Lycopodiaceae
Order:
Lycopodiales
Genus (Plantae): Lycopodium
Lycopodium (from Greek lukos, wolf and podion, diminutive of pous, foot) is a genus of clubmosses, also known as ground pines or creeping cedars, in the family Lycopodiaceae. Two very different circumscriptions of the genus are in use. In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), Lycopodium is one of nine genera in the subfamily Lycopodioideae, and has from 9 to 15 species. In other classifications, the genus is equivalent to the whole of the subfamily, since it includes all the other genera. There are then more than 40 accepted species.
Descrption
They are flowerless, vascular, terrestrial or epiphytic plants, with widely branched, erect, prostrate or creeping stems, with small, simple, needle-like or scale-like leaves that cover the stem and branches thickly. The leaves contain a single, unbranched vascular strand and are microphylls by definition. The kidney-shaped or reniform spore-cases (sporangia) contain spores of one kind only (isosporous, homosporous) and are borne on the upper surface of the leaf blade of specialized leaves (sporophylls) arranged in a cone-like strobilus at the end of upright stems. The club-shaped appearance of these fertile stems gives the clubmosses their common name.
Lycopods reproduce asexually by spores. The plants have an underground sexual phase that produces gametes, and this alternates in the lifecycle with the spore-producing plant. The prothallium developed from the spore is a subterranean mass of tissue of considerable size and bears both the male and female organs (antheridia and archegoniae). However, they are more commonly distributed vegetatively through above- or below-ground rhizomes.
Reference: Wikipedia