Historical taxonomy Sphagnum wulfianum was first
described by
Gustav Karl Girgensohn in 1860 from specimens collected near
Tartu, Estonia (then part of
Livland in the
Russian Empire). Girgensohn discovered the species in 1847 in a swampy forest at Techlefer manor (now Tähtevere) and named it after von Wulf, the manor's owner. The
lectotype specimen, designated in 2007, was collected by Girgensohn on 21 March 1847, and is housed in the Institute of Agriculture and Environment of the
Estonian University of Life Sciences (TAA). This specimen is notable for bearing
sporophytes and includes Girgensohn's original notes describing key characteristics of the species, including its distinctive feature of having 8–12 branches per fascicle. Several
syntypes and other original specimens collected by Girgensohn are preserved in various
herbaria including Helsinki (H), St. Petersburg (LE), and Tartu (TAM). A few years after Girgensohn's original German description,
Edmund Russow published an additional
Latin description in 1865 in response to criticism about lacking
histological details in the original description. The
type locality at Techlefer/Tähtevere has since been destroyed due to drainage and
urban development, and the species has become
extinct at this site. Despite its loss at the type locality,
S. wulfianum remains widely but sparsely distributed throughout the boreal zone.
Classification Sphagnum wulfianum was historically placed in its own
monospecific section Polyclada within the genus
Sphagnum. However,
molecular phylogenetics studies indicate it belongs within or
sister to section
Acutifolia. While earlier studies suggested it might be nested within
Acutifolia, more extensive molecular sampling indicates it may be more closely related to section
Squarrosa, though its precise
phylogenetic position remains ambiguous – it could be sister to
Squarrosa, sister to
Acutifolia, or sister to both sections combined. The species is morphologically unique among
Sphagnum species in having six to twelve branches per fascicle (branch cluster), with at least three of these being spreading branches. This distinctive feature led to its original classification in its own section, but molecular evidence indicates this characteristic evolved within one of the major
Sphagnum lineages rather than representing an early diverging lineage. ==Description==