Abstract
Unique pillar-like colonies of aquatic mosses, rising from cyanobacterial and algal mats, have been discovered in some freshwater lakes in the vicinity of Syowa Station (69°00′S, 39°35′E), continental Antarctica. These moss pillars are about 40 cm in diameter and up to 60 cm high and occur at the lake bottoms mainly between 3 and 5 m depth. The primary component is a species of Leptobryum, a genus unknown in the continental Antarctic terrestrial bryoflora and as an aquatic genus elsewhere in the world. Bryum pseudotriquetrum is often an associated species. In longitudinal section the pillars reveal several whitish layers formed by mineral sediment and dead cyanobacteria. It is speculated that the biomass of aquatic mosses at the bottom of many Antarctic lakes is considerably greater than that previously estimated.
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Accepted: 11 April 1999
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Imura, S., Bando, T., Saito, S. et al. Benthic moss pillars in Antarctic lakes. Polar Biol 22, 137–140 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003000050401
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003000050401