taxonID	type	description	language	source
994487BF68006015FF4C9712CF9CFA1F.taxon	materials_examined	Additional specimens examined: — BOLIVIA. La Paz: Laguna de Milluni, 4595 m, 16 º 21 ' 18 " S 68 º 09 ' 23 '' W, 15 August 2007, Cano & Jiménez 3821 (LPB, MUB). COLOMBIA. Distrito Capital: Bogotá, Cerro de Guadalupe, Linding s. n. (BM). PERU. Cajamarca: pr. Cerro Yanahuanga, 3900 m, 6 º 51 ' 13 '' S 78 º 36 ' 41 '' W, 17 June 2009, Cano et al. 5149 (MUB, USM).	en	Jiménez, Juan A., Cano, María J. (2012): Bryoerythrophyllum subcaespitosum (Pottiaceae), a new combination for a neglected species from South America. Phytotaxa 68 (1): 29-35, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.68.1.3, URL: http://biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.68.1.3
994487BF68006015FF4C9712CF9CFA1F.taxon	distribution	Distribution and habitat: — Bryoerythrophyllum subcaespitosum was until now considered to be an endemic of Colombia, known only from the type locality in Bogotá. It is here reported from three new sites in Bolivia, Colombia and Peru, extending its range significantly southward (Fig. 3). In Bolivia B. subcaespitosum occurs on soil under volcanic rock at 4595 m in wet Puna in a Bofedal area. The Bofedales are high Andean wetlands characterized by the presence of cushion bog vegetation dominated by Juncaceae. The Peruvian specimen grows on rocks with accumulated soil at 3900 m in Jalca formation. The Jalca is a transitional alpine formation usually interpreted as drier than Páramo and wetter than Puna. It is a shrubby grassland dominated by Poaceae and Asteraceae. The only information available about the habitat of the two Colombian populations is that both grew in Montane rain forests between 2800 and 3200 m.	en	Jiménez, Juan A., Cano, María J. (2012): Bryoerythrophyllum subcaespitosum (Pottiaceae), a new combination for a neglected species from South America. Phytotaxa 68 (1): 29-35, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.68.1.3, URL: http://biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.68.1.3
