Lichens that had moss or liverworts as the surface on which they live
A bryophilous lichen is one that grows on a bryophyte โ that is, on a moss or liverwort.[1] Those which grow on mosses are known as muscicolous lichens,[2] while those which grow on liverworts are called hepaticolous lichens.[3]Muscicolous derives from the Latin muscus meaning moss,[4] while the suffix colous means "living or growing in or on".[5]Lichens are slow-growing organisms, and so are far more likely to be overgrown by a bryophyte than to overgrow one.[6][7] However, they are better able to compete if the bryophyte is sickly or decaying and they can be parasitic upon them.[1][8][9] Some, rather than overgrowing the bryophyte, instead live among its branches.[9] Bryophilous lichens are particularly common in heathland and arctic or alpine tundra.[9] Because many are small and inconspicuous, they are easy to overlook.[1]
McCarthy, P. M. (1989). "Observations on fragmentation and loss among lichen thalli". Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section B: Biological, Geological, and Chemical Science. 89B: 25โ32. JSTOR20494485.
Smith, C. W.; Aptroot, A.; Coppins, B. J.; Fletcher, A.; Gilbert, O. L.; James, P. W.; Wolseley, P. A., eds. (2009). The Lichens of Great Britain and Ireland. London: The British Lichen Society. ISBN978-0-9540418-8-5.