[Pogonatum madagassum (Hampe) A. Jaeger, morePolytrichum alpinum var. propinquum (R. Br.) I. Hagen, Polytrichum assimile Hampe, Polytrichum brachypelma Hedw., Polytrichum buchananii Broth., Polytrichum cataractarum Hedw., Polytrichum commune f. nigrescens (Warnst.) Albr. Rohn., Polytrichum commune f. uliginosum (Wallr.) Mönk., Polytrichum commune subsp. perigoniale (Michx.) Kindb., Polytrichum commune subsp. yuccifolium (Ehrh. ex Funck) Giacom., Polytrichum commune var. commune Hedw., Polytrichum commune var. deflexifolium (Warnst.) Podp., Polytrichum commune var. nigrescens Warnst., Polytrichum commune var. perigoniale (Michx.) Hampe, Polytrichum commune var. uliginosum Wallr., Polytrichum commune var. yuccifolium (Ehrh. ex Funck) Hook. & Taylor, Polytrichum deflexifolium Warnst., Polytrichum elatum P. Beauv., Polytrichum juccifolium Ehrh. ex F. Weber & D. Mohr, Polytrichum leonii Papp, Polytrichum madagassum Hampe, Polytrichum mildbraedii Broth., Polytrichum paludicola Cardot, Polytrichum perigoniale Michx., Polytrichum perigoniale var. nigrescens (Warnst.) Warnst., Polytrichum propinquum R. Br., Polytrichum purpurascens Brid., Polytrichum quadrangulare Gilib., Polytrichum radulifolium Müll. Hal., Polytrichum remotifolium P. Beauv., Polytrichum subremotifolium Geh. & Hampe, Polytrichum swartzii var. nigrescens (Warnst.) I. Hagen, Polytrichum uliginosum (Wallr.) Schriebl, Polytrichum yuccifolium Ehrh. ex Funck, Polytrichum yuccifolium var. perigoniale (Michx.) Mart.]
Plants highly variable in size and habit but usually rather tall and robust. Stems (2-)5-10(-70) cm. Leaves loosely imbricate to rather distant; sheath clasping the stem and usually plainly visible wet or dry; blade typically divergent and sharply toothed to the base; marginal cells of lamellae in section broader than those beneath, retuse to distinctly notched, with prominent knobs; perichaetial leaves not markedly longer than the foliage leaves, ending in a short, roughened spinulose tip. Capsule short-rectangular.
Moist organic soil in wet habitats, pastures, old fields, and meadows, peatlands, margins of bogs or swamps, often covering extensive areas, low to moderate elevations, widespread in the boreal forest; rare north of the tree line and absent from the high Arctic (D. G. Long 1985); Greenland; Alta., B.C., Man., N.B., Nfld. and Labr., N.W.T., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que., Sask., Yukon; Alaska, Ark., Calif., Colo., Conn., Del., Fla., Ga., Idaho, Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Miss., Mo., Mont., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Oreg., Pa., R.I., S.C., S.Dak., Tenn., Tex., Utah, Vt., Va., Wash., W. Va., Wis., Wyo.; n, c Europe; n, e Asia; n Africa; Atlantic Islands (Macaronesia); Pacific Islands (Hawaii, New Zealand); Australia.
Plants in compact, rather dense tufts. Stems to 6 cm. Leaves densely imbricate and crowded, somewhat less sharply toothed than in var. commune; marginal cells of lamellae in section narrow, more shallowly grooved; peri-chaetial leaves conspicuous and ribbon-like, exceeding the foliage leaves, mostly hyaline, subentire, ending in a long, nearly smooth awn. Capsule short-rectangular to cubic.
Variety perigoniale has a distinctly 'bushy' aspect, the leaves thick set and densely imbricate. The typical expression is common on the Atlantic coastal plain, as in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey (the type was from Carolina). Elsewhere, its distribution and ecology are poorly documented, but it is probably not simply a dry land phase (H. A. Crum and L. E. Anderson 1981), occurring sporadically throughout the range of the species. The perichaetial leaves are not only longer than the foliage leaves, but distinctly ribbon-like, irregularly twisted and curled when dry.