Fir clubmoss

Fir clubmoss, Wildlife Trusts

Fir clubmoss by Colin Dixon

Fir clubmoss

Fir clubmoss is a primitive plant found in rocky, moorland and mountain habitats. The stems of this tufted, upright fern look like tiny conifers.

Enw gwyddonol

Huperzia selago

Pryd i'w gweld

January to December

Gwybodaeth am rywogaethau

Ystadegau

Height: up to 10cm
Common.

Ynghylch

Clubmosses are very primitive plants that are found in rocky habitats, and on moorland, bogs and mountains. They reproduce by spores at the base of their leaves. Fir clubmoss is a tufted, upright fern that is particularly common in Scotland, but can be found among rocks and on bare ground in upland areas around the UK.

Sut i'w hadnabod

There are seven species of clubmoss in the UK, which are very difficult to tell apart. Fir clubmoss is a member of the 'fern allies' section of flora and is yellowy-green with upright stems and needle-like leaves, giving it the look of a tiny conifer.

Dosbarthiad

Widespread in the uplands.

Roeddech chi yn gwybod?

Clubmosses are members of an ancient group of plants that included the tree-like lepidodendrons that dominated the world in the Carboniferous period, some 320 million years ago. These trees and mosses died and fossilised to become the coal we use for fuel today.