Millennial timescale regeneration in a moss from Antarctica

Mosses, dominant elements in the vegetation of polar and alpine regions, have well-developed stress tolerance features permitting cryptobiosis. However, direct regeneration after longer periods of cryptobiosis has been demonstrated only from herbarium and frozen material preserved for 20 years at most [1]. Recent field observations of new moss growth on the surface of small moss clumps re-exposed from a cold-based glacier after about 400 years of ice cover have been accompanied by regeneration in culture from homogenised material [2], but there are no reported instances of regrowth occurring directly from older preserved material

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Roads, Esme, Longton, Royce, Convey, Peter ORCIDORCID record for Peter Convey

On this site: Peter Convey
Date:
17 March, 2014
Journal/Source:
Current Biology / 24
Page(s):
R222-R223
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2014.01.053