Conocephalum conicum Is a full shade high humidity liverwort that grows on rock
Making a bioactive terrarium? We also sell clean up arthropods (springtails), crustaceans (isopods), and Oniscomorpha (Pill millipedes). These unique living organisms will help establish a healthy relationship between the soil, plant roots and biodegradables inside the enclosure to thrive. If you interested in learning more please message/contact us or go to moss-wholesale.com
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Please watch this video on how we collect liverwort spores for clay disc inoculation
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Check out this video about Conocephalum conicum, Great Scented Liverwort, Snakewort:
https://youtu.be/QFTFz77PSooLooking for a stunning carpeting plant for you terrarium? well this one is stunning with her snake scale pattern and her shinny allure giving her her namesake 'Snakewort'.
She is easy to grow and loves high humidity, she will send out puffy white roots and will grow quite quickly into a thick layered carpet over rocks and earth/sand substrate.
C. conicum has large (up to 17 mm wide), very conspicuous thalli that often form extensive mats.
The thalli are strongly aromatic, flat, leathery, dark green, dichotomously branching, often with purplish margins.
The surface is smooth and shiny, with a prominent but ungrooved network of lines.
Its air pores are more conspicuous than the lines. Male plants have sessile, terminal cushions.
Fruiting female plants bear terminal, stalked, conical receptacles with short descending lobes.
The typical habitat of C. conicum is on damp, shady, mildly base-rich to neutral substrates, such as shady rocks by rivers, streams and waterfalls, but it can also grow
on soil on damp banks, on shady walls, and montane rock ledges and banks of gullies.
C. salebrosum is very similar to C. conicum, but often slightly smaller (branches up to
12 mm wide). Its thalli are dull above. C. salebrosum can be difficult to distinguish
from C. conicum, but C. salebrosum has thalli with conspicuous grooves defining the lines on the surface.