Native Plants

Davall’s Pottia Moss

Pottia davalliana

USDA symbol: PODA3

North America: native

Have you ever wondered about those tiny green carpets that seem to appear on rocks, soil, and various surfaces around your garden? You might be looking at a fascinating little native moss called Davall’s pottia moss (Pottia davalliana). While this diminutive bryophyte may not make headlines like flashy flowering perennials, ...

Discovering Davall’s Pottia Moss: A Tiny Native Treasure

Have you ever wondered about those tiny green carpets that seem to appear on rocks, soil, and various surfaces around your garden? You might be looking at a fascinating little native moss called Davall’s pottia moss (Pottia davalliana). While this diminutive bryophyte may not make headlines like flashy flowering perennials, it plays a quiet but important role in North American ecosystems.

What Exactly is Davall’s Pottia Moss?

Davall’s pottia moss belongs to the diverse world of bryophytes – those ancient, non-flowering plants that include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Unlike the plants most gardeners are familiar with, this little moss doesn’t have true roots, stems, or leaves in the traditional sense. Instead, it’s a herbaceous plant that often attaches itself to solid surfaces like rocks, wood, or even concrete rather than growing directly in soil.

You might also encounter this species under its scientific synonyms Pottia conica or Pottia minutula in older botanical references, but Pottia davalliana is the currently accepted name.

Where Does This Native Moss Call Home?

As a North American native, Davall’s pottia moss has earned its place in our continent’s natural heritage. While specific distribution details for this particular species are limited in available research, members of the Pottia genus are generally found across various regions of North America, adapting to different climates and conditions.

Is Davall’s Pottia Moss Beneficial in Gardens?

While you probably won’t find Davall’s pottia moss at your local garden center, discovering it growing naturally in your landscape can actually be a positive sign. Here’s why this tiny moss can be beneficial:

  • It helps prevent soil erosion on slopes and bare patches
  • Provides habitat and moisture retention for tiny soil organisms
  • Indicates healthy, relatively undisturbed growing conditions
  • Adds subtle texture and natural character to rock gardens and naturalized areas
  • Requires no maintenance, watering, or fertilizing once established

How to Identify Davall’s Pottia Moss

Identifying specific moss species can be challenging even for experts, but here are some general characteristics to look for:

  • Very small size – we’re talking tiny, often just a few millimeters tall
  • Forms small patches or scattered individual plants rather than large carpets
  • Typically grows on disturbed soil, rocks, or other hard surfaces
  • Appears as small, upright tufts when viewed closely
  • May produce small, capsule-like spore structures on thin stalks

Keep in mind that definitive moss identification often requires microscopic examination of specific features, so if you’re curious about the exact species in your garden, consider consulting with a local botanist or bryologist.

Living Harmoniously with Native Mosses

Rather than trying to cultivate Davall’s pottia moss (which would be quite difficult anyway), the best approach is to appreciate it when it appears naturally. If you’re interested in encouraging native mosses in general, try:

  • Reducing foot traffic in areas where mosses appear
  • Avoiding chemical treatments in naturalized garden areas
  • Maintaining some partially shaded, undisturbed spots in your landscape
  • Being patient – mosses establish slowly but are remarkably resilient

The Bigger Picture

While Davall’s pottia moss might seem insignificant compared to your prize roses or towering native oaks, these tiny plants represent millions of years of evolutionary success. They’ve mastered the art of thriving in challenging conditions where other plants struggle, and they do it all without fuss or fanfare.

Next time you spot what looks like tiny green fuzz growing on a rock or in a crack in your sidewalk, take a moment to appreciate these remarkable little survivors. You just might be looking at Davall’s pottia moss – a small but genuine piece of North America’s native plant heritage.

Pottia davalliana is also known as...

Often we refer to plants by their common names. When shopping for plants the scientific name is the best way to positively identify the plant species you desire. But some plants have more than one name! While it doesn't happen often, nurseries might display one name while you're searching for another. Pottia davalliana is also known as:

Pottia conica Fürnr. ex | USDA symbol: POCO37
Pottia minutula Fürnr. ex | USDA symbol: POMI20

Why do some plants have more than one name? Over time plant species may be renamed for a few reasons:

  1. Botanists in different regions named the same plant without knowing it had already been classified.
  2. A species was reclassified after scientific advances in, for example, DNA analysis.
  3. Slight variations within a species are sometimes mistakenly identified as entirely new species.

Classification

Group: Moss
Kingdom: Plantae - Plants
Division: Bryophyta - Mosses
Subdivision: Musci
Class: Bryopsida - True mosses
Subclass: Bryidae
Order: Pottiales
Family: Pottiaceae Hampe
Genus: Pottia (Rchb.) Fürnr. - pottia moss

Species: Pottia davalliana (Sm.) C.E.O. Jensen - Davall's pottia moss

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA