Big trees, turquoise or yellowish green, slightly shiny, scattered into pieces. The main stem is creeping, spreading, and densely covered with reddish-brown rhizomes; The branches are erect, 6-7 cm long, unbranched at the lower part, densely covered with scales, and densely branched at the upper part. The branches are slender; The stems and branches are covered with many branched scales. Stems and leaves are shaped. The stems and leaves are wide heart-shaped, the branches and leaves are ovate-lanceolate, the base is wide and ear-shaped, and most of them have weak longitudinal folds; The upper part of leaf margin has coarse teeth; The middle rib is single and disappears in the upper part of the blade; The leaf cells are linear, the horn cells are large and loose, and the thin wall is transparent. Dioecious. The stalk of the capsule is reddish-brown, which is higher because of the plant body. Capsule erect, oval.
I choose the maintenance method of stuffy cultivation, and there are three kinds of planting substrates.
1 Use ceramsite as planting material.
Ceramsite is used at the bottom and nutrient soil is planted at the top.
Use ceramsite at the bottom and moss directly at the top.
Wild native soil used for planting.
The native soil in the field can't be called real soil, because it grows in coniferous broad-leaved forest, and its root attachments are all dead branches and rotten leaves, which I call soil.
I didn't take photos when I first planted it. It's been planted for a month now. My observation is that planting with wild native soil is the best, which may not have much to do with soil. The conclusion is that the planting method with less damage to the root system is more conducive to the maintenance of perennial moss.
Why do you say that? The underground stems of moss are creeping, and I forced the plants to be separated during the planting process. I felt a strong sense of tearing on the underground stems, and some felt that they had been abruptly torn down. Because I planted several plants in the third way, it didn't do much harm to their roots.