Crescent-cup Liverwort

Lunularia cruciata

''Lunularia cruciata'', the crescent-cup liverwort, is a liverwort of the order Marchantiales , and the only species in the genus ''Lunularia'' and family Lunulariaceae. The name, from Latin ''luna'', moon, refers to the moon-shaped gemmacups.
Lunularia cruciata  Geotagged,Israel,Lunularia,Lunularia cruciata,Winter

Appearance

The discus-shaped gemmae are readily dislodged from the cups by splashes of rainwater. They can then quickly "take root" and start to grow in suitably damp places, which is why they are so successful in greenhouses.

''Lunularia'' is not purely asexual; it can also reproduce sexually with four archegonia arranged in a cross-shaped head bearing diploid sporophyte plantlets. As in other liverworts, the main plant body or thallus is a haploid gametophyte.

Like many other liverwort species, ''Lunularia'' produces a dihydrostilbenoid growth hormone, lunularic acid, that is reported to be a growth inhibitor of liverworts.
Lunularia cruciata  Geotagged,Israel,Lunularia,Lunularia cruciata,Winter

Distribution

''Lunularia'' occurs commonly in western Europe, where it is native to the region around the Mediterranean. It is also common in California, where it now grows "wild", and is known as an introduced weed in gardens and greenhouses in Australia. Ella Orr Campbell believed that ''Lunularia'' was introduced into New Zealand sometime after 1867. In America, the species grows only as a sterile form, easily recognized by the crescent-shaped cups containing asexual gemmae.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionMarchantiophyta
ClassMarchantiopsida
OrderMarchantiales
FamilyLunulariaceae
GenusLunularia
SpeciesL. cruciata
Photographed in
Israel