The genus
Lycopodium was first published by
Carl Linnaeus in 1753. He placed it in the Musci (mosses) along with genera such as
Sphagnum, and included species such as
Lycopodium selaginoides, now placed in the genus
Selaginella in a different order from
Lycopodium. Different sources use substantially different
circumscriptions of the genus. Traditionally,
Lycopodium was considered to be the only extant genus in the family
Lycopodiaceae, so includes all the species in the family, although sometimes excluding one placed in the monotypic genus
Phylloglossum. Other sources divide Lycopodiaceae species into three broadly defined genera,
Lycopodium,
Huperzia (including
Phylloglossum) and
Lycopodiella. In this approach,
Lycopodium sensu lato has about 40 species. In the
Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), the broadly defined genus is equivalent to the subfamily
Lycopodioideae, and
Lycopodium is one of 16 genera in the family Lycopodiaceae, with between 9 and 15 species.
Species Using the narrow
circumscription of
Lycopodium, in which it is one of nine genera in the subfamily Lycopodioideae, the
Checklist of Ferns and Lycophytes of the World recognized the following species : •
Lycopodium clavatum L. – stag's-horn clubmoss; subcosmopolitan •
Lycopodium diaphanum (P.Beauv.) Sw. –
Tristan da Cunha •
Lycopodium japonicum Thunb. – eastern Asia (Japan west and south to
India and
Sri Lanka) •
Lycopodium lagopus (Laest. ex C.Hartm.) Zinserl. ex Kuzen. – circumpolar arctic and subarctic •
Lycopodium papuanum Nessel – New Guinea •
Lycopodium venustulum Gaudich. –
Hawaii,
Western Samoa, the
Society Islands •
Lycopodium vestitum Desv. ex Poir. – northwest South America (Andes) ==Uses==