One of the most accessible places to learn mosses and liverworts in the coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest is along the trunk of a big leaf maple (Acer macrophyllum). This tree, on account of the rivulets and ridges that run down it and the dense and dichotomously branched canopy is a haven for thick carpets of bryophytes and a few other epiphytes. Below are photos of the some of the common species you might encounter. I'll try and add more as I encounter them.
Also in the comments below, @chlorophilia mentions a much more in depth repository of Big Leaf Maple epiphytes and associated that can be found here:
Showing tree-like habit and multiple sporophytes emerging from stem apex. On trunk of big leaf maple
Showing undulose leaves in flattenned arrangement with sporophytes surrounded by leaves (immersed) and dense carpets on the trunk of bigleaf maple
On trunk of bigleaf maple
On bigleaf maple showing pendant shoots, undulating leaves with acute apices and sporophytes with obvious stalk
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This is an excellent post, rambryum. It will make these bryophytes much more interesting and more accessible to people. Would it be all right with you if I share your contribution on the Biodiversity Squamish FB Group Page?
By all means. I still need to add about 10 more species of bryophytes and lichens:
Antitrichia curtipendula
Dendroalsia abi..
Isothecium stoloniferum
Orthotrichum lyallii
Plagiomnium venustum
Plagiomnium insigne
Porella navicularis
Zygodon ver.
Graphis scripta
Lobaria pulmonaria
Parmelia sulc.
Thank you for sharing this! I need to pay more attention to those epiphytes now :)
Porella cordaeana is another common epiphyte on bigleaf maple
—great note Randal! You remind me that I had set up a project once upon a time toward a similar end!
https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/epiphytic-associates-of-bigleaf-maple
I had no idea Plagiomnium could grow on a maple! So cool!!
With all the rain this spring, the bryophytes in Squamish are catching the eye of people 'out there' exploring. It's timely to re-post your wonderful journal entry, Randal/rambryum, to the Biodiversity Squamish FB group page, together with the link that Andrew/chlorophilia contributed. Thanks to both of you!
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