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Curated catalog

Calliergonella cuspidata

Calliergonella cuspidata

Calliergonella cuspidata: aquatic plant of the family Hypnaceae. Light: Medium to high.

Family
Hypnaceae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

4 °C - 26 °C

pH

5 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Light

Medium to high

CO2

10-40 mg/L

Description

Geographical Origin & Habitat:

Native predominantly to the cool, temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, Calliergonella cuspidata is widespread across Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. It is a strictly terrestrial and semi-aquatic cold-water moss. It thrives exclusively in highly saturated, alkaline environments such as wild bogs, fens, marshlands, and damp, calcareous meadows. Unlike true tropical aquatic mosses, it has not evolved to live permanently submerged in deep water; in nature, it experiences only temporary, shallow inundation during extreme seasonal rainfall or snowmelt.

Taxonomy & Genetics:

Scientifically classified within the Calliergonaceae family, it is commonly known in English as "Pointed Spear-Moss." Taxonomically, it is an entirely different class of moss compared to the widely used tropical aquarium mosses (like Taxiphyllum or Vesicularia). Its genetics are heavily hardwired for terrestrial winter survival, meaning it absolutely requires a cold, highly oxygenated rest period to thrive. Because of this, it is considered a deeply problematic and generally unsuitable species for the standard, heated tropical aquarium hobby.

Physical Structure:

The structural architecture of Calliergonella cuspidata is striking, distinct, and uniquely beautiful. It completely lacks roots, utilizing terrestrial rhizoids to grip damp soil or wet limestone. The plant grows in somewhat upright, sprawling, and loosely branched colonies. The defining architectural feature is the tips of its stems: the small, overlapping leaves are tightly rolled into incredibly sharp, rigid, needle-like points, giving the entire shoot the appearance of a dangerous green spear perfectly adapted to piercing through dense marsh grass.

Color & Texture:

In its native, cold terrestrial habitat, the coloration shifts brilliantly from a bright, almost yellow-green in the saturated tips to a deep, dark olive or brownish-gold at the base of the stems. The texture is extremely rigid, stiff, and highly prickly to the touch, drastically contrasting with the soft, fluffy texture of true aquatic Java moss. However, if forced underwater in a tropical aquarium, the plant quickly loses its rigidity, the bright colors fade to a sickly pale yellow, and the spear-like tips become soft and bloated.

Care and observations

Lighting & CO2:

If a hobbyist attempts to cultivate this moss in an aquarium, extreme measures are required. It demands absolutely blasting, high-intensity lighting to prevent the stems from rotting away. Because it is not a true aquatic plant, it is incredibly inefficient at performing photosynthesis underwater. Therefore, massive, borderline toxic levels of pressurized CO2 injection are absolutely mandatory to force the plant to grow while submerged, artificially sustaining its life support in an unnatural environment.

Nutrition & Substrate:

In nature, it feeds heavily from damp, mineral-rich, calcareous soils. In an aquarium, it is completely rootless and must be tied to rocks or wood. Because it struggles severely to absorb nutrients underwater, the water column must be aggressively dosed with a comprehensive liquid fertilizer containing high levels of potassium and trace elements. It must never be buried in aquasoil, as the submerged stem bases will instantly rot, detaching the entire colony from the substrate.

Water Chemistry:

This is where 99% of hobbyists fail: Calliergonella cuspidata is a strictly cold-water, alkaline plant. It absolutely despises heated tropical aquariums. Temperatures above 22°C (72°F) will cause the moss to suffocate, turn black, and completely disintegrate within weeks. It demands chilled water (10-18°C) and prefers extremely hard, alkaline water (high pH and high GH) loaded with calcium. Furthermore, it requires violent, highly oxygenated water flow to artificially blast away the biofilm that naturally rots terrestrial mosses underwater.

Space Management & Placement:

Due to its absolute incompatibility with standard tropical aquariums, it should NEVER be used in a typical planted tank alongside tetras or Anubias. It is exclusively suited for specialized, unheated, cold-water biotope tanks or entirely terrestrial Paludariums, Wabi-Kusa setups, and dart frog terrariums. In a terrestrial setup, it creates a magnificent, prickly, bright green carpet over damp rocks, where it can thrive exactly as it does in European marshlands.

Pruning:

If successfully grown in a cold-water or terrestrial setup, pruning is straightforward. Use sharp scissors to trim the stiff, spear-like stems to the desired height. The cuttings can be tightly bound to new pieces of damp rock using cotton thread to propagate the colony. Because it does not naturally attach itself to hardscape like Java moss, you must physically bind it; the terrestrial rhizoids will not form a permanent underwater grip.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute guarantee with this species is catastrophic rot in a tropical tank. When submerged in water warmer than 22°C, the moss undergoes rapid cellular death. The stiff spears turn into a slimy, foul-smelling, black mush that will violently spike the ammonia levels in the aquarium, potentially killing fish and shrimp. Even in cold water, because it is not a true aquatic plant, it is a massive magnet for devastating Black Beard Algae (BBA) and suffocating fungal blooms.

Plant profile

Placement
Centro vasca, Primo piano a gruppo
Botanical form
moss / liverwort or fern prothallium
Light
Medium to high
CO2
10-40 mg/L
Growth
Media
Column fertilization
Fertilizzazione in colonna stabile, regolata su crescita e alghe
Root fertilization
Utile soprattutto per forme radicate; non prioritaria per epifite
Trimming
Rimuovere foglie deteriorate e potare senza destabilizzare il gruppo.
Propagation
Divisione, Separazione piantine figlie
Nutrients
I range di durezza, CO2 e nutrienti sono conservati nelle note di cura quando riportati dalla fonte.
Sensitivity
Evitare cambi bruschi di luce, CO2 o fertilizzazione.
Layout role
Centro vasca, Primo piano a gruppo

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Licensed live observation photo for Calliergonella cuspidata. Matched to Calliergonella cuspidata.

Licensed live observation photo for Calliergonella cuspidata. Matched to Calliergonella cuspidata.