These male gametes swim towards the female gametes, which are held in the archegonium on the female plants. Fertilisation takes place and the offspring grows upwards, forming the seta ('stem') and eventually the spore-bearing capsule. This sporophyte looks like it is part of the original plant, but is actually parasitic on it, so when you see a spore capsule forming like the one below, it isn't one plant with green leaves and a spore capsule, it's the mother (leaves) and child (spore-producing sporophyte).
Emerging spore capsule on Polytrichum moss |
Old capsules of Polytrichum commune |
The fact that the male gametes swim towards the females gives us one reason that mosses flourish in damp places.
4 comments:
Thank you, I have learned something new again!
I love that little holly fungus - though I've never found it here in NE Yorkshire, despite searching carefully. I wonder what its distribution is?
Gill, the distribution is general, but very thinly scattered. The Fungal Records Database has 190+ records, a few of which are in your area.
http://www.fieldmycology.net/FRDBI/FRDBIrecord.asp?intGBNum=2280
It's classified as rare in the red book but I suspect it's overlooked. This specimen was under a Holly on my local hedgerow, so it's a new dot on the map.
Nice images of fungus, I love nature..........
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