Planted
Along dunes.
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum with flowers, garden weed
Locally common under montane beech forest
Potentially Encalypta rhaptocarpa? But not E. vulgaris due to hair pointed phyllids. Otherwise note, oblong shape, acute tip ending in awn and toothed, basal cells long and smooth, strong costa, entire margins, pluripapillose cells visible in cross section and on phyllid surface. Note how attachment to costa at the end of the phyllid is asymmetrical, one side joining a few cells lower than the other.
Found growing in metal pipe.
On rotting wood; Gametophyte branching; dimidiate leaves; leaf margins toothed; double teeth present; leaf attachments to stem are decurrent
Growing in bryophyte mound. Erect, phyllids becoming shorter towards the falcate shoot apex. Fleshy calyptra over sporophyte
Potentially Racomitrium lanuginosum. Growing on road side. Lots of short tufted branches. Decurrent hairpoint with a 90 degree reflex can be seen in fourth image.
Long acuminate tip that is densely papillate. Rest of phyllid is also papillate.
loads of cool lichens on stems of ribbonwood or something like that
Nothofagus forest. Potentially A. tenera?