In addition to pictures I took specifically to illustrate mosses and ferns, there are photos here, collected from other galleries, that show some of the charming or picturesque ways in which mosses in particular, 'invade' various environments.
D110-2012 ferns type A (one of four types)
Heathdale area
Each emerging frond in this particular patch had two pairs of darkened leaflets. Another patch of this same type of fern lacked this feature though it was situated not more than a few hundred feet away in a similar location in terms of exposure to light, wind, and water. Closer examination of the dark 'leaflets' shows them to be comprised of tiny spherical blobs, not the usual flatter flesh of leaves. Are these reproductive features?
Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
April 20, 2012
(nex5n)

D110-2012 ferns type A (one of four types)
Heathdale area
Each emerging frond in this particular patch had two pairs of darkened leaflets. Another patch of this same type of fern lacked this feature though it was situated not more than a few hundred feet away in a similar location in terms of exposure to light, wind, and water. Closer examination of the dark 'leaflets' shows them to be comprised of tiny spherical blobs, not the usual flatter flesh of leaves. Are these reproductive features?
Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
April 20, 2012
(nex5n)
Sony NEX-5N |
Original size: 4912x3264 |
Current: 800x532 |