Bear moss

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bear moss
Moss snake (Lycopodium annotinum)

Moss snake ( Lycopodium annotinum )

Systematics
Lycophytes
Subdivision : Lycopodiophytina
Class : Bear moss plants (Lycopodiopsida)
Order : Bear moss (Lycopodiales)
Family : Bear moss family (Lycopodiaceae)
Genre : Bear moss
Scientific name
Lycopodium
L.

Club mosses ( Lycopodium called), also snake Moss, pentagram, Wolfsfuß, are a genus of plants from the family Clubmosses (Lycopodiaceae) in the order of Bärlappartigen (Lycopodiales).

description

Illustration of A lobe Bärlapp ( Lycopodium clavatum ) and B Snake Bärlapp ( Lycopodium annotinum )
Microscopic image of the cross section of the stem axis: A xylem, B phloem, C endodermis, D cortex. Scale = 0.1 mm

Characteristic of the genus Lycopodium s. st. is as for the flat bear lobe ( diphasiastrum ) the differentiation of the shoot into an above or below ground crawling main axis and ascending or upright, shorter side branches. The basic axis can reach lengths of several meters.

All rungs are dichotomously branched, but both anisotomic (the two branches are different) and isotomous (the two branches are designed in the same way) branches can occur both in the area of ​​the base axis and in the area of ​​the side rungs, which can result in very different growth forms.

In contrast to the flat bear lobes ( Diphasiastrum ), the leaves are in the genus Lycopodium s. st. needle-shaped with lengths of several millimeters. They are arranged in a spiral on all sides around the stems of the side shoots. This makes them round in cross-section with a diameter of 5 to 12 millimeters (including the leaves).

In all Lycopodium species, the sporophylls are located in clearly separated, ear-shaped or club-shaped, terminal sections. They are usually much smaller, but always different from the leaves .

Occurrence

The approximately 40 to 50 species are distributed in the temperate to tropical areas and tropical mountain regions almost worldwide. There are 14 species in China, two of them only there. There are only a few species in Central Europe , for example: Club club moss or piston club moss ( Lycopodium clavatum ) with long-stalked, usually once fork-shaped, branched sporophyll stands and snake club moss or sprouting club moss ( Lycopodium annotinum ) with sessile sporophyll stands.

Most of the Lycopodium species are found in the temperate and subarctic regions. They often thrive in open forests, especially coniferous forests, rocky slopes, moors, or in heaths . The club moss ( Lycopodium clavatum ) is even found in the mountainous regions of tropical Africa.

Systematics and distribution

The genus Lycopodium was established by Carl von Linné . As lectotype species was Lycopodium clavatum L. fixed. The generic name Lycopodium is made up of the Greek words λὐκος lykos for wolf and πὀδιον podion for little feet, as the leaf sprouts of the club moss resemble the legs of a wolf. Synonyms for Lycopodium L. are: Lycopodion Adans. orth. var., Austrolycopodium Holub , Clopodium Raf. nom. inval., Copodium Raf. nom. superfl., Lepidotis Mirbel nom. superflat., Oxynemum Raf. , Pseudodiphasium Holub , Pseudolycopodium Holub nom. inval., Lycopodiastrum Holub ex Dixit , Diphasium C. Presl ex Rothm. , Diphasiastrum Holub .

There are different broad views in this genre, which differ widely among the various authors. The taxonomic classification and subdivision of the club moss family (Lycopodiaceae) and thus also the genus Lycopodium is still fraught with a lot of uncertainty. In 1975 Josef Holub separated the flat bear lobe ( Diphasiastrum ) from the genus Lycopodium . For example, in the Flora of China 2013 and Euro + Med 2013, among other things, the flat bear lobe ( Diphasiastrum ) is reintegrated into Lycopodium as the Complanata section . On the other hand, there is broad agreement about the independence of the genus Lycopodiella (with the swamp club moss ); the species classified here are classified when the genus Lycopodium s. l. is understood in a broader sense, summarized as Section Clavata .

Club moss ( Lycopodium clavatum )

There are 40 to 60 species of Lycopodium :

Spores of the club moss ( Lycopodium clavatum )

use

The spores of the club moss are used in homeopathy . Bear moss are also a traditional remedy for primitive peoples and were also traditionally used in Central Europe. Areas of application were and still are in some cases: as wound remedies, especially for poorly healing wounds, for cramps of all kinds, gout and rheumatism.

In traditionally produced pills , bear moss spores were used as a separating agent to prevent them from sticking together.

Bear moss contain essential oils and alkaloids (especially lycopodine ). It is also of high concentration of aluminum - ions in the cell sap .

Bear moss spores have been used worldwide to produce pyrotechnic effects since the Neolithic shamanism . Fire breathers like to use them instead of flammable liquids. The effect is based on a deflagration, similar to a flour dust explosion , since the spores have a large particle surface in the atomized and dry state.

In the chemical-physical oil stain test to estimate a molecule diameter, bear moss spores are used to better identify the spreading edge of the oil stain.

Trivia

The band Rammstein used about 4 tons of Lycopodium from Chinese harvest for their American tour in 2012 , whereby the Chinese annual harvest was only about 11 tons.

literature

  • Henning Haeupler, Thomas Muer: picture atlas of the fern and flowering plants of Germany . Ed .: Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (=  The fern and flowering plants of Germany . Volume 2 ). Eugen Ulmer, Stuttgart (Hohenheim) 2000, ISBN 3-8001-3364-4 .
  • Werner Rothmaler (greeting), Rudolf Schubert, Klaus Werner, Hermann Meusel (ed.): Excursion flora for the areas of the GDR and the FRG. Volume 2: Vascular Plants. 14th edition. People and knowledge, Berlin 1988, ISBN 3-06-012539-2 .
  • Franz Fukarek: Department of Fern Plants, Vascular Spore Plants, Pteridophyta. In: Urania plant kingdom in four volumes. Volume 2. Mosses, ferns, naked plants. Urania, Leipzig / Jena / Berlin 1992, ISBN 3-332-00495-6 .
  • Erich Oberdorfer : Plant-sociological excursion flora . With the collaboration of Theo Müller. 7th, revised and expanded edition. Eugen Ulmer, Stuttgart (Hohenheim) 1994, ISBN 3-8252-1828-7 .
  • Wolfgang Adler, Karl Oswald, Raimund Fischer: Excursion flora of Austria . Ed .: Manfred A. Fischer. Eugen Ulmer, Stuttgart / Vienna 1994, ISBN 3-8001-3461-6 .
  • Walter Meusel, Joachim Hemmerling: The Bärlappe Europe. In: The New Brehm Library. Volume 401, Westarp, Hohenwarsleben 2003, ISBN 3-89432-785-5 .
  • Li-Bing Zhang, Kunio Iwatsuki: Lycopodiaceae. : Lycopodium. , P. 4. In: Wu Zheng-yi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (Eds.): Flora of China. Volume 2-3: Lycopodiaceae through Polypodiaceae . Science Press and Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing / St. Louis, 2013, ISBN 978-1-935641-11-7 .
  • Warren H. Wagner Jr., Joseph M. Beitel: Lycopodium. In: Flora of North America Editorial Committee (Ed.): Flora of North America North of Mexico . Volume 2: Pteridophytes and Gymnosperms . Oxford University Press, New York / Oxford a. a. 1993, ISBN 0-19-508242-7 , pp. 25 (English, limited preview in Google Book Search). efloras.org

Web links

Commons : Bärlappe ( Lycopodium )  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Bärlappigem. In: Lexicon of Biology. Volume 2. Arctic to Blast Cells. Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8274-0327-8 , p. 237.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Li-Bing Zhang, Kunio Iwatsuki: Lycopodiaceae. : Lycopodium. , P. 4. In: Wu Zheng-yi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (Eds.): Flora of China. Volume 2-3: Lycopodiaceae through Polypodiaceae . Science Press and Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing / St. Louis, 2013, ISBN 978-1-935641-11-7 .
  3. ^ Lycopodium at Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, accessed August 21, 2015.
  4. Helmut Genaust: Etymological dictionary of botanical plant names. 3rd, completely revised and expanded edition. Birkhäuser, Basel / Boston / Berlin 1996, ISBN 3-7643-2390-6 .
  5. a b c data sheet. In: M. Christenhusz, E. von Raab-Straube: Lycopodiophytina. 2013. Euro + Med Plantbase - the information resource for Euro-Mediterranean plant diversity .
  6. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Michael Hassler, Brian Swale: Family Lycopodiaceae, genus Lycopodium; world species list. Status 2002 ( Memento from February 27, 2009 in the Internet Archive ).
  7. ^ Josef Holub : Diphasiastrum, a new genus in Lycopodiaceae. In: Preslia , Volume 47, 1975, pp. 97-110.
  8. a b Bärlapp-like. In: Lexicon of Biology. Volume 2. Arctic to Blast Cells. Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8274-0327-8 , p. 236.
  9. Whoever is good on earth during his lifetime: Rammstein - With Germany's largest cultural export on tour in America . In: Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin , July 6, 2012, p. 21.