Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming, USA. |
Much of the Black Hills is forested with ponderosa pine and the flora has strong affinities with the Rocky Mountains, but the cool shady gulches of the northern Hills are different. Here one finds forests of white spruce and paper birch, more like the Great Lakes region, New England and Canada to the north. There often are many boreal species in these gulches, part of the diverse flora that makes the Black Hills famous as a "botanical crossroads".
Distribution maps for white spruce, paper birch. Note disjunct occurrences in Black Hills
in western South Dakota, northeast Wyoming. All maps from Flora of North America.
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Ground pine, Lycopodium annotinum. Courtesy Jerzy Opioła. |
Ground cedar, L. complanatum (= Diphasiastrum complanatum). Courtesy Craig Althen. |
Among the boreal plants in the Hills are three species of club moss or Lycopodium: ground pine, ground cedar and tree club moss. These are not true mosses but rather “fern allies”. They are vascular plants, i.e. with a well-developed vascular system which the true mosses lack. Like ferns they reproduce by spores, rather than by seeds as do “higher” plants.
The “fern allies” are actually a hodgepodge of plant groups, lumped together in the past because relationships among them weren’t clear. Most current phylogenies split the former allies into two major groups: the Lycophytes and the Euphyllophytes. The first group contains the club mosses; the second includes true ferns, horsetails and whisk ferns, as well as seed plants, which split off from the rest more recently.
Phylogeny of vascular plants. Click to view. Modified version of this diagram. |
The scientific name for the club moss genus, Lycopodium, means wolf’s claw, a very old name referring to the shape of the roots. Club moss is used sometimes used as a homeopathic remedy in spite of its known irritation to mucous membranes. The oils of the spores of some species are highly flammable, do much so that these club mosses were used in the past as flash powder for photography and stage lighting! (Reader’s Digest 1997). Drawing below courtesy U. Minnesota Extension Service.
Note re scale: the three club mosses in this post are less than 30 cm (12 in) tall. |
Tree club moss, L. dendroideum. Courtesy Kirisame. |
Distribution of Black Hills club mosses. |
Patches thinks that if she waits long enough, the little boreal plants will reveal themselves. |
Reader’s Digest. 1997. Magic and medicine of plants. Reader’s Digest Association, Inc. [Recommended -- interesting, entertaining, and I especially like the carefully written “statements regarding the scientific evidence about the validity of the uses in folk medicine” for each species covered.]