Berg-Gabelzahnmoos (Wildform)

Variety

Berg-Gabelzahnmoos (Wildform)

Approved Data

created by Alex&Sempi at 01.03.2026

Features

Resistances

resistant

robust

Little susceptible

fully hardy

hardy down to -30°C

Growth habit

Game Variety

leaves: densely leafed

growth habit: cushion-shaped

Blätter: gekräuselt

Wuchsform: epiphytisch

growth habit: upright

growth habit: ground cover

strong leaves

strong lateral shoot development

growth habit: cushion-like growth

small leaves

Spear shaped leaves

ground cover

Blätter: zugespitzt

Blätter: einfach

Blätter: rinnenförmig

Höhe: 1 - 10 cm

Color

light green / pale green

medium green

Taste

not edible

Toxizität: ungiftig

Location

biotope: forest

Biotop: Felsen, Mauer

Pflanzung: Waldbeet

Gartenstil: Waldgarten

Fertilization: nutrient-poor

pH value: acidic soil (4-6)

fertilization: low-lime

Soil: mineral

Heat requirement: cool

Herkunft: einheimisch, indigen

Boden: organisch

Fruit shape

capsule

straight

slightly curved

Size: very small

Form: aufrecht wachsend

Season Overview

Sowing

Harvest

Harvest

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

1ST YEAR

FOLLOWING YEARS

Description

Mountain fork moss (Dicranum montanum) is a common epiphytic moss. Dicranum montanum is a common epiphytic moss that usually colonizes the bark of beech, pine, and birch trees. It prefers acidic, nutrient-poor, and low-calcium substrates. It is particularly common in forests, but also occurs on rocks. Frequent accompanying mosses are Dicranum scoparium, Hypnum cupressiforme, and Tetraphis pellucida. The moss is circumboreal in distribution. In Europe and Germany, it is one of the most common epiphytic mosses on trees and is relatively insensitive to air pollutants. Growth Dicranum montanum forms dense, fresh to yellowish-green cushions. The individual plants, which grow up to 5 cm high, have a dense, brown rhizoids felt. The dry, twisted to coiled leaves tend to curl to one side when moist. They taper to a long, widely serrated awl-shaped tip and can grow up to 4 mm long and 0.4 mm wide. The midrib ends at the tip of the leaf and occupies about 1/5 of the leaf. The thick-walled, unpunctured lamina cells are elongated rectangular in the middle of the leaf and about 25-50 µm long and 7-11 µm wide. At the leaf tip, the cells are significantly shorter to subsquare. The inconspicuous leaf wing cells are slightly swollen. The fork-toothed mosses (Dicranum) are a genus of leafy mosses from the Dicranaceae family. Depending on the source, there are 92 species or 140 to 150 species worldwide. Characteristics Mosses of this genus are usually vigorous plants that often form extensive lawns or larger cushions. The mostly upright, simple or forked stems can grow to over 10 centimeters in height and are covered with a more or less dense, whitish to reddish-brown rhizoids felt. The leaves are usually lanceolate, often sickle-shaped and turning to one side, less often straight, often grooved and hollow at the top and sharply or bluntly pointed, with differentiated leaf wing cells and a simple rib extending to the tip of the leaf or protruding. The leaf cells are elongated-rectangular to linear, often shorter to rounded-square in the upper part of the leaf. The long seta bears an upright to inclined and straight or curved spore capsule with a long-beaked lid and 16 peristome teeth forked to the middle.

Non hybrid

Frostproof

Growing tips

🌞 Location & soil Mosses are not tied to a single location, but use a wide range of habitats - the decisive factors are humidity, microclimate and a suitable substrate. - Shady to semi-shady - Cool to moderately warm - Soil, dead wood, bark, stones, rocks, walls, roofs, water, bogs - low in nutrients, rich in humus, mineral, acidic to alkaline - permanently moist to episodically dry 🌱 Planting - Spores: tiny spores are ejected from spore capsules. These spread over a large area and germinate on moist, suitable substrates. - Division: Remove a piece of moss and place it on a new substrate. - "Inoculation": chop up the moss, mix with water and spread on the substrate (even growth on stone, wood or soil) - Actively "planted": place on suitable substrate and keep conditions stable. - They do not need soil, but adhere to stone, wood, bark or soil. - Constant moisture is important, especially in the first few weeks. - In the garden, they are suitable as ground cover, lawn substitutes or for shady areas. - Indoors, they only last in closed containers (bottle garden, terrarium). - Optimal planting period: April to September (15-20°C) 💧 Care - Watering: water regularly, rainwater, No waterlogging, compacted soil possible - Remove weeds, leaves and needles - Fertilization: none - No soil cultivation - Protection from direct sunlight ❄️ Winter protection Mosses are among the most cold-resistant land plants. Many species can survive at temperatures far below freezing because they are allowed to freeze without their cells being destroyed. 🌿 Good neighbors - Plants must tolerate low levels of nutrients. - They must not grow too tall. - They should not form dense root systems. - They must like moisture. - They must not shade or overgrow mosses. - Ferns, forest grasses, sedges, liverworts, wood anemones, woodruff, dwarf funcias (woodland bed) - Rushes, cotton grass, broom heather, bog lily, carnivorous plants (bog bed) - Saxifrage, thyme, sedum, dwarf grasses (rock garden) - Japanese maple, ferns, dwarf bamboo, holly (Japanese garden) - Primula, violets, crocuses, snowdrops, lily of the valley, star moss (ornamental garden) 🚫 Bad neighbors - Lawn and ornamental grasses, sunflowers - Funkias, asters, phlox, large ferns, mint - Ivy, periwinkle, golden strawberries, chokecherry, guelder rose - Nettle, lupine, dahlias, roses, geraniums, clover - Lavender, thyme, oregano, rosemary, sedum - Steppe and prairie plants 🍂 Diseases - Fungal infestation - Algae growth 🐌 Pests - Springtails - fungus gnats - birds - Snails

Details

Light requirement

Semi-shaded

Water requirement

Moist

Soil

Light (sandy)

Nutrient requirement

Low

Light germinator

Germination temperature

15 - 20 °C (Degrees Celsius)

Plant distance

1 cm

Row spacing

1 cm

Seeding depth

0.1 cm

Diseases

Dry rot of crucifers

Pests

Springtails

Land snails

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